Postcolonial Developments: Agriculture in the Making of Modern India 9780822399759

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 9780822399759

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Postcolonial Developments

POSTCOLONIAL DEVELOPMENTS Agriculture in the Making of Modern India

Akhil Gupta

DUKE UNIVERSITY PRESS

Durham I London 1998

Third printing, 2003 © 1998 Duke University Press

All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper 00 Typeset in Minion by Keystone Typesetting, Inc. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data appear on the last printed page of this book.

For my parents Jwala Prasad and Meena Gupta

Contents

Preface and Acknowledgments Introduction

ix

1

1

Agrarian Populism in the Development of a Modern Nation

2

Developmentalism, State Power, and Local Politics in Alipur

3 "Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy 4

"Indigenous" Knowledges: Ecology

154 234

5 Peasants and Global Environmentalism: A New Form of Governmentality? Epilogue Notes

330

341

Works Cited Index

399

379

291

33 106

Preface and Acknowledgments

T

his book demonstrates what the postcolonial condition means for the lives of rural people in north India. Since the Second World War, the everyday lives of poor people in the Third World have been thoroughly transformed by the Age of Development, during which has occurred some of the most ambitious national and international experiments in social engineering that the world has ever witnessed. What have these experiments meant to specific groups of people in different locations who are both the targets and the subjects of "development"? In this book I attempt to describe and analyze what development has meant to people living in one village in north India. The book explores the complex and conflicted formation of development institutions, ideologies, and practices in local, regional, national, and global spaces. Postcolonial Developments differs from much of the literature on development in that it focuses primarily on how underdevelopment becomes a form of identity in the postcolonial world. I argue that underdevelopment is not merely a structural location in the global community of nations; rather, underdevelopment is also a form of identity, something that informs people's sense of self. Who people think they are, how they got that way, and what they can do to alter their lives have been profoundly shaped by the institutions, ideologies, and practices of development. In rural northern India, a pervasive feeling of being underdeveloped, of being behind the West, articulated with other identities of caste, class, region, gender, and sexuality, produces people's sense of their selves. I have termed this complex articulation of "backwardness" the postcolonial condition; thus, development is never a singular or monolithic "apparatus" that imposes itself on the rural poor.

An identity of "underdevelopment" is thoroughly imbricated in nationalism because the nation is largely assumed as the "natural" unit of analysis in the discourse of development. In the waning years of the twentieth century, however, this assumption of the nation-as-actor is being revised by the ascendance of a neoliberal global economic agenda. The neoliberal agenda, in turn, is being resisted by grassroots groups that object to the form of Cmal)development encoded in neoliberal policies. Resistance to a globalizing agenda is generating responses which participate in nationalist discourse in some respects and which depart sharply from its premises in others. The challenge to ideas of the nation embodied in global neoliberalism and in the responses of grassroots groups to it problematizes the easy equation between "the grassroots" and "the local." Grassroots organizing has to be conceptualized in terms of a warped space that is no longer simply "local" or "global" but a little bit of each. And neoliberalism itself has to be contextualized within a much broader pattern of global regulation and government which extends far beyond the "economic" and which fundamentally alters the identities and everyday experiences of people. A project such as this, which has involved several rounds of fieldwork and which has been written, rewritten, and revised in many different institutional contexts, involves debts, intellectual and personal, to many different people. Even if I could recall all the people who have contributed to this book in different ways, I would be unable to acknowledge my gratitude to them sufficiently. The people to whom this study owes the most are the residents of Alipur, particularly Suresh, Sompal, and the Manager. They and their families welcomed me into their homes throughout my stay and in all my subsequent visits. I am especially grateful to the Manager and his family for housing me and for looking after me as they would one of their own. When I first started writing my dissertation, Arjun Appadurai generously shared drafts of his work on agrarian questions in Maharashtra. More than anything else, it was these papers that enabled me to see the immense possibilities and potential of combining a sophistication in social theory with detailed empirical work in agriculture. I have presented early and late drafts of some chapters to audiences in different parts of North America. An early version of Chapter 1 was presented in 1994 at the SSRC workshop "The Dynamics and Transmission of Development Ideas" held at the University of Michigan. I am x

Preface and Acknowledgments

grateful to Fred Cooper and Randy Packard for inviting me to that workshop and to Gillian Hart for her insightful comments. Subsequently, different parts of this long chapter were presented at the Center for International Security and Arms Control, Stanford University; at the South Asia Seminar, University of California, Berkeley; at the Center for Comparative Studies in History, Society, and Culture at the University of California, Davis; at the South Asia Seminar/Workshop at the University of Chicago; and at the Anthropology Department Colloquium at York University in Toronto. An early version of the last section of Chapter 3 was first presented on a panel entitled "Intersections: Minority Discourse/Area Studies/Cultural Studies" at the 1994 Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association in Atlanta. I thank Lisa Yoneyama for inviting me to be a part of that panel. I also thank David Lloyd for inviting me to present part of this chapter at the Center for European Studies at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1997. A preliminary version of a small part of Chapter 4 was first presented on a panel that I co-organized with Arun Agrawal entitled "Environmental Conflicts and the Negotiation of Identities in South and Southeast Asia" at the Annual Meeting of the Association for Asian Studies held in Honolulu, Hawaii, in 1996. Chapter 5 has had many incarnations. A preliminary version was first presented on a panel organized by George Collier called "Peasant Cultures and the Global Economy" at the International Congress of Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences in Mexico City in 1993. Obtaining an enthusiastic response from an international audience assured me that this chapter had an important role to play in this book. Subsequent versions have been presented at the Institute of Asian Research at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver; at the Jackson School of International Studies, University of Washington, Seattle; at the Agrarian Studies Seminar, Yale University; at the Cultural Analysis Colloquium, University of California, Santa Barbara; at the forum "Science and Media in Their Transnational Locations" organized by the Postdisciplinary Approaches to the Technosciences Resident Research Group at the Humanities Research Institute, University of California, Irvine; at the MIT Anthropology Program and the Center for International Studies' Peoples and States lectures series on Ethnic Identity and Conflict; at the Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, University of California, Berkeley; at the University of Oregon's Anthropology Department colloquium series "Culture, Power, History"; at the MacArthur Workshop on Sustainability held at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis; and at the Preface and Acknowledgments

xi

Department of Urban Planning, UCLA, Los Angeles. I am grateful to audiences at all these places for their comments and in particular to Hugh Gusterson for his discussion of my paper at MIT. Many people were kind enough to give me comments on some chapters of the manuscript or the whole book in its early stages. I am particularly indebted to George Collier, Donald Moore, Arjun Appadurai, and one anonymous reviewer for Duke University Press for their comments on the entire manuscript. Their criticisms and suggestions helped make this a much better book. Jim Ferguson, Liisa Malkki, and Tanya Luhrmann read early versions of the Introduction and gave me many suggestions that proved invaluable in revising and rewriting it. The comments of Stacy Pigg and Prabhu Mohapatra on an oral presentation of the first chapter greatly aided in its conceptualization, and Renato Rosaldo provided many useful suggestions on that chapter as well. Inderpal Grewal, Aditya Behl, and Lawrence Cohen gave me excellent comments on Chapter 3, and Suzana Sawyer and Ann Gold provided detailed feedback on Chapters 3 and 4; Peter Vandergeest offered insightful criticisms of a talk crafted from Chapter 4; and Sanjeev Khagram provided extremely detailed and helpful comments on Chapter 5. The accounts of the Karnataka Farmers Association in Chapter 5 and the Epilogue owe a great deal to primary material collected by Mridula Udayagiri, which she was kind enough to share with me. Despite the demands for authorship imposed by accrediting agencies, the production of a work such as this is a necessarily collaborative and social act. I wish to acknowledge all those who contributed to this project in their roles as students and colleagues. One group of people deserve special gratitude, namely, the students who served as research assistants during the final stages of the manuscript. Sameer Pandya and Aly Remtulla did an absolutely amazing job of reading the manuscript with a fine-tooth comb, making excellent suggestions for revision and locating and summarizing reference material. James Krapfl spent many long hours making the maps. Yoo-Jean Chi provided steady research assistance that consisted of a multitude of tasks. Rohan Chandran and Sandeep Jain were responsible for the charts. I also thank my colleagues, first, at the University of Washington for providing me with a wonderfully supportive atmosphere in which to begin my academic career and, then, at Stanford University for helping advance my scholarly work. At the University of Washington, lowe a special debt to the chairs of the two departments where I worked, Frank Conlon of South Asian Studies and Joel Migdal of International Studies. xii

Preface and Acknowledgments

Resat Kasaba, Kathie Kasaba, Vicky Lawson, Michael Toolan, Christine Di Stefano, Val Daniel, Ruth Frankenberg, Lata Mani, Ted Swedenburg, and Biff Keyes sustained me intellectually and personally. At Stanford, George Collier was the kind of chair that every junior faculty member dreams of having; jane Collier, Sylvia Yanagisako,joan Fujimura, Paulla Ebron, Renato Rosaldo, Miyako Inoue, Carol Delaney, and Purnima Mankekar have provided a vibrant intellectual home in the Anthropology Department. Other scholars from related departments who have contributed to this book by their support and insights include joel Beinin, Gordon Chang, Estelle Freedman, Gabrielle Hecht, Sharon Holland, Suvir Kaul, David Palumbo-Liu, Mary Pratt, Richard Roberts, and Debra Satz. Most important, I thank the staff in the Anthropology Department, who have helped me immensely during the time that I have been here, particularly Beth Bashore, who kept me connected during my year of fieldwork; Ellen Christensen, who has been a rock of support during some trying times; and Shannon Brown. My early fieldwork was supported by the Center for Research in International Studies at Stanford, which gave me grants for both the fieldwork and the writing stages, and the Indian Council for Social Science Research (ICSSR). Subsequent field research was funded by the Fritz Endowment for International Studies at the University of Washington. Most of this book was written while I was a fellow at the Agrarian Studies Program at Yale University in 1993-94. I had the pleasure of spending the academic year with a superb group of fellows: Bob Baldwin, Catherine LeGrand, Prabhu Mahapatra, Alex Naty, David Nugent, Stacy Pigg, Ricardo Salvatore, and Paolo Squatriti. The atmosphere of constructive criticism and camaraderie at Agrarian Studies bore the stamp of everything thatJim Scott does; and the program strikes just the right mix of administrative minimalism and formal programming. No small part of its success owes to Kay Mansfield, whose care for the fellows' needs extended far beyond her formal duties. Other people at Yale to whom I am indebted for intellectual and social companionship are Angelique Haugerud, Gil joseph, Bill Kelly, Patricia Passaro, Nancy Peluso, Donna Perry, Rukhsana Siddiqui, Helen Siu, K. Sivaramakrishna, and Bala Sivaramakrishna. Finally, without Akash Bhargava's help, we would not have found such a wonderful place to stay, nor would our stay there have been as enjoyable. I also thank all the students who read parts of this manuscript in their courses and gave me extremely valuable feedback. Although I cannot mention the names of particular individuals, I am grateful to the stuPreface and Acknowledgments

xiii

dents who responded to this manuscript in the 1996-97 academic year: in the graduate seminar "Topics in Political Economy" in the fall; in the seminar on the political economy of India in the spring; and in Michael Watts's graduate seminar on agrarian issues at the University of California, Berkeley. I have learned a great deal from the varied reactions to the book in these courses. The work represented in this book would not have been possible without another group of collaborators: the graduate students with whom I have worked most closely over the last few years. They are Falu Bakrania, Federico Besserer, Tom Boellstorf, Carrie Bramen, jackie Brown, Alicia Schmidt Camacho, Donna Daniels, Monica DeHart de Galicia, Alnoor Ebrahim, Elizabeth Enslin, jack Ferguson, Michael Goldbach, Helen Gremillion, Stefan Helmreich, Aida Hernandez, Francisca james Hernandez, Sanjeev Khagram, jana Sequoya Magdalena, Don Moore, Vivek Narayanan, Diane Nelson, Laura Nelson, julie Olson, Amit Rai, Shankar Raman,josie Saldanha, Victoria Sanford, Suzana Sawyer, Aradhana Sharma, Lok Siu, Gita Srinivasan, Rebecca Stein, Dori Tunstall, and Mridula Udayagiri. A small group of South Asia scholars in the Bay Area have contributed more to this book than they could imagine. Many of us work in institutions where a critical mass of scholars working on the subcontinent is not available. In particular, I thank Aditya Behl, Lawrence Cohen, Inderpal Grewal, Ravi Rajan, Raka Ray, and Parama Roy. I have been fortunate to know a terrific intellectual community in India, from whom I have learned a great deal. Colleagues and friends who have contributed to this project directly by their questions and comments or indirectly by their acute observations of contemporary India include Zoya Hasan, Sudipta Kaviraj, Uma Chakravarty, Shahid Amin, Niraja Gopal]ayal, Indivar Kamtekar, Urvashi Butalia, Kumkum Sangari, Rajiv Bhargava, Harpreet Mahajan, C. Rajamohan, Nirmala George, Gautam Bhatia, and Ritu Bhatia. Librarians and library facilities at Stanford University, Yale University, the Library of Congress, the India International Center (lIe), George Washington University, and Goa University were critical for locating sources and references. For their friendship and nurture, I thank those people who have provided me with the perspective that puts academic work and academic production in its proper place: Ethiraj Venkatapathy,juliajaroch, Tara Mohanan, K. P. Mohanan, Arun Kumar, Poornima Kumar, jim Ferguson, Liisa Malkki, Ravi Oswal, Suruchi Oswal, Resat Kasaba, Kathie xiv

Preface and Acknowledgments

Friedman Kasaba, Vikram Seth, Caren Kaplan, Prabhat Hajela, Aparna Mehrotra, Fernando Salas, Ashok Sangani, and Geeta Sangani. I must thank my family, without whose support this book, like much else, would not have been possible: Jwala and Meena Gupta; and Anita, Rahul, and Shefali Aggarwal. After rounds of fieldwork, I looked forward to returning to Delhi to spend time with my in-laws, Kamla Mankekar and the late D. R. Mankekar. Were it not for their affection and support, my fieldwork would not have been so successful. I am sorry that my father-in-law did not live to see the finished book but grateful that a field site near Delhi provided me a brief opportunity to get to know him. Finally, lowe the deepest gratitude to my partner, Purnima Mankekar, who has endured and participated in all stages of this project. We were married in the middle of my first long spell of fieldwork in 1984-85; since then, she has seen this project through its various stages, constantly giving advice, encouragement, and support over the years. It is safe to say that this would have been a very different and much weaker manuscript without her incisive intelligence and keen editorial eye. She read the drafts of all the chapters several times and, just as I was ready to abandon the manuscript, pushed me to reorganize the argument, clarify the prose, and sharpen the analysis. This book owes more to her than anyone else.

Preface and Acknowledgments

xv

Introduction

I

t was late July 199 2 , during my third extended field trip to the region around Alipur, a small village of approximately seven hundred people in western Uttar Pradesh.! Located in the flat, rich agricultural tract called the Doab (the region between the two great rivers of northern India, the Ganges and the Jamuna), Alipur has an economy based largely on agriculture. The monsoons were in full swing so the ground was muddy. But, after the blazing heat of summer, the verdant fields brought hope and relief. Carefully maintaining my balance on the mounds and raised irrigation canals, I walked through the fields to a little hamlet on the outskirts of the village. Ram Singh, an older, lowercaste (jatav) man, lived there, in a settlement founded by his grandfather and inhabited exclusively by his extended kin. Because he shared approximately fifty acres with his three brothers, he was a well-to-do farmer by local standards. Ram Singh had been involved in agricultural activities for almost all his life, and although most of the work was now done by Inder Singh, one of his adult sons, he continued to participate actively in farming. When I reached the house, a cot was brought out and positioned carefully in the shadow of the house, next to the tube well. 2 Ram Singh had gone out but returned shortly, along with Inder Singh. With the tape recorder positioned between us, we began a wide-ranging conversation. I had interviewed Ram Singh in earlier field trips: he was an articulate and engaging speaker, in contrast to his son, whose comments I sometimes found hard to decipher. We had already been talking for about forty-five minutes when we broached the topic of the effect of the high-yielding varieties on the land; there was a momentary lull in the

Main road leading into Alipur, with the village pond to the right

conversation while I turned the tape around, and then we launched into the discussion, parts of which are reproduced below. Like other places in northwest India, Alipur had witnessed a drastic transformation in agricultural practices after the introduction of the "green revolution," in which use of hybrid, high-yielding seeds had resulted in a fourfold increase in India's wheat output since the late 1960s. The green revolution combined the use of hybrid seeds with high doses of chemical fertilizer and intensive irrigation to obtain high yields. 3 Like the other farmers of Alipur, Ram Singh had planted only high-yielding varieties of wheat. While talking about the effects of green revolution agriculture on the land, Ram Singh contrasted the properties of chemical fertilizer with manure or desi fertilizer: 4 Ram Singh: Earlier it was like this, that no one knew about [chemical] fertilizer and people used to apply desi fertilizer. Now, they mostly use market fertilizer: it makes the soil weak and deficient. Otherwise, organic manure was the thing used most widely. And it used to yield a very good output. Now people want even more output. They are pursuing [planting] two or three crops, so the soil is getting weaker because of the fertilizer, and the taste is diminishing in this way. Compared with before, there are no elements [tatv] 2

Introduction

left in the land. Earlier, the land had a chance to relax [sastavein]; now who allows it to [do so]? Inder Singh: Apart from that, the thing is that now organic manure [bhooday kaa khaad] is not applied. Animal manure [pashuon kaa khaad] made a lot of difference. Ram Singh: If there was enough organic fertilizer for all our fields, we wouldn't touch market fertilizer. Despite the near unanimity of evaluations regarding its superiority, manure was overshadowed by the vastly greater use of chemical fertilizers. Ram Singh maintained that the output had been "very good" with organic manure alone. Land had begun to be overused, however, which prevented the application of an adequate amount of manure. The amount of manure employed was rather small when compared with the amount of chemical fertilizer used. The fact was that Alipur's farmers had become increasingly dependent on the use of chemical fertilizers. When I started fieldwork in 1984-85, farmers used rather low levels of chemical fertilizer. In fact, most farmers employed chemical fertilizer in quantities that agricultural scientists would have deemed suboptimal. But in 1991-92, farmers informed me that they were using increasing amounts of chemical fertilizer. Ram Singh, for example, said that "if you take market fertilizer, and keep using it, then the farming will be spoiled. It won't be able to produce output. These things have been investigated. [By contrast,] manure gives the soil strength. Since the new varieties have come, we have had to use [chemical] fertilizer. If we don't apply fertilizer, they won't give any production. The [quantity of] fertilizer we use depends on the amount of money we have; when we get more money, we apply more fertilizer. We now have to apply more fertilizer than before. Earlier, people used to put five kilograms per bigha, now they put ten, even twelve. 5 People keep using more fertilizer." At the same time as he complained of the need to use larger quantities of chemical fertilizer, however, Ram Singh also maintained that "the output is better and the prices are good, so there's been no loss to us." The data he advanced were not actual figures but the kind of rule-of-thumb guidelines most often used by farmers about the level of inputs. 6 Very similar figures were cited by other farmers in Alipur. And why was manure so much more effective than chemical fertilizer in "strengthening" the soil? The difference lay in that, as compared with manure, chemical fertilizers released their heat suddenly. Inder Singh Introduction

3

noted that with chemical fertilizer "the land remains hard, it makes the land swell at once. The organic manure gives it real strength, the other one just makes it swell." Ram Singh added, "Chemical fertilizer makes the crop shoot up [jasal ho uthaanay waali cheez hail, whereas organic manure makes for strength. Without strength, no matter how much fertilizer you put, the field won't give output; this is what we have determined from experience." Therefore what made manure so much better than chemical fertilizer was not just that manure released its heat slowly but that it strengthened the soil. Ram Singh went on to voice one of the most common complaints made by people in Alipur; ever since they started using large quantities of chemical fertilizer, the taste of wheat had declined: "Earlier, no one knew about market fertilizer [bazaar hi hhaadl, and the wheat grown was desi wheat. Desi wheat was very good to eat. It had a lot of sweetness [mithaasl. It was very tasty [swaadishtl. But this [high-yielding hybridl wheat is not as good. Is it the fertilizer, or is it something else? In terms of output, it does produce more. But it is not as tasty as desi wheat." He seemed unsure whether to attribute the blame to fertilizer. In tum, I was skeptical of his explanation. So I pushed him to clarify what he meant, asking whether the decline in tastiness was due to fertilizer or to the variety of wheat grown. His answer left no doubt: "No, fertilizer affects its taste. It is not tasty. The more fertilizer you put, the less tasty it will be [jitnaa hhaad pail dogay, utnaa swaadisht nahee rahegaaJ, this is for sure. Of course, the output will go up." Ram Singh kept referring to the trade-off made to achieve higher productivity; what had been sacrificed was taste. The more chemical fertilizer one applied, the less tasty was the wheat. It is important to note, however, that "taste" did not reflect just the momentary sensation on the tongue. It was expressive of other properties (gunas) that the grain possessed. I have presented fragments of a conversation with one farmer as an example of the agricultural discourse found in Alipur. In the course of administering a detailed survey of farming practices, I realized that a significant disjuncture existed between the discourse of farmers and the language of the survey forms that I had adapted from the protocols used by an agricultural research institute. It took me just a few days to learn to substitute "How much fertilizer did you put at the time of sowing?" for "Quantity of basal dressing" and to ask how much fertilizer they had put later where the form said, "Quantity of top dressing." But what I was completely unprepared for were the explanations that emerged when I pressed farmers to account for seeming discrepancies in the data. They 4

Introduction

spoke of fields, plants, and fertilizers in terms of whether they were hot or cold, drying or moisturizing. They told me about the declining "strength" of the land, its ability to "speak," its "taking hold of" and supporting certain crops. Ram Singh, for example, talked about the need for the soil to "relax" and "rest" and of the difference between the swelling of the land encouraged by chemical fertilizers and the longerlasting strength imparted by manure. It is tempting to appropriate Ram Singh's explicit critique of chemical fertilizers' deleterious effects on the strength of the soil and the taste of crops into a set of structural oppositions which pit a system of meanings and symbols that was "nonWestern" or "indigenous" against the universalizing discourses of "the West." For example, to understand why Ram Singh associated the use of chemical fertilizers with the declining taste of wheat, one would need to appreciate the importance of a substantivist theory that connected the life of plants to human life (a fuller account of this theory is presented in Chapter 4). But whereas a strategy positing a different cultural "system" is useful in decentering and denaturalizing Western assumptions and can be employed in understanding Ram Singh's critique of marketbased production, it fails to account for the enthusiasm with which farmers took up green revolution agriculture or for Ram Singh's assessment that, because the output was plentiful and prices good, "there's been no loss to us." What is more important is that such a theory would find the ease with which farmers switched codes, speaking in the "system" of indigenous agronomy in one instance and the "system" of bioscience in the next, disconcerting. In explaining the declining strength of the soil, Ram Singh deployed a theory that emphasized the need for land to "relax" simultaneously with a theory that employed a bioscientific discourse according to which the soil had to be constituted of the "right combination" of different elements. In a similar vein, he talked of the need to apply ever larger quantities of chemical fertilizer in the face of declining soil strength in order to sustain production, but he tempered that observation with the note that the quantities of fertilizer applied depended mostly on the resources of the household. Different farmers offered compelling explanations of farming decisions, explanations that were based on a blend of "humoral agronomy"; "scientific" theories; the politics of class, caste, and gender; and prevailing discourses of development and the role of the state. Such situations, in which contradictory logics and incommensurable discourses are intermingled with one another, have, for the most part, Introduction

5

evaded sustained analytic attention in the ethnographic literature. Anthropologists have become acutely aware that "difference" need not take the form of a "system" of otherness. Yet the question remains of how to deal with such redoublings and border crossings not as humorous asides but as a central analytic challenge. 7 How does one conceptualize impure, hybrid, incommensurable modes of thinking and being without filtering them of their messiness? The rest of this book is an attempt to corne to grips with this complex border zone of hybridity and impurity which I see as a central trait of what may be termed "the postcolonial condition."8 To undertake an ethnographic exploration of "postcoloniality" means to pay close attention to the interconnections between divergent discourses and structural forces. For instance, "local" understandings of agriculture in Alipur were profoundly shaped by globally and nationally circulating discourses of development. When peasants in Alipur expressed astonishment that someone like me had corne from a country where farming was so "advanced" to study their "backward" techniques of agriculture, they were articulating a distinction between the "developed" and the "underdeveloped" that has been the mainstay not just of international development discourse but also of the independent Indian nation-state. Instead of discounting farmers' declarations about their technological and economic "backwardness" on the grounds that such statements originated "outside" the village, I consider them to be constitutive of "local" lives and "local" systems of meaning in rural north India. Farmers were as likely to draw on-and contest-hegemonic meanings of development as they were to employ-and resist-dominant (that is, indigenous) understandings of agriculture. Was there, then, any good reason to regard discourses of development as "external" and indigenous knowledges of agronomy as "internal" to the lives of the inhabitants of Alipur? In characterizing the situation of nonelite rural people in northern India as "the postcolonial condition," I am aware that I risk raking up recent controversies surrounding the use and abuse of the notion of "postcoloniality." In some institutional contexts in the First World academy, the adjective "postcolonial" has become an indiscriminate signifier for a depoliticized incorporation of "difference." It is used to refer to Third World nation-states (whether formally colonized or not); minorities and indigenous groups of the United States; and, sometimes, even settler colonies inhabited by immigrants from an overpopulated Eu6

Introduction

rope-both where the colonizers are now a majority (such as the United States, Canada, and Australia) and where they are a minority (such as South Africa and the former Southern Rhodesia).9 Three questions continually haunt this idea of "the postcolonial." The first is the relationship between a body of "theory" that uses "postcolonial" as a prefix, and the conditions, states of being, or objects that are denoted by that term. Is there a "postcolonial condition" that gives rise to and is in turn described by "postcolonial theory"? Is "postcolonial theory" merely the agonistic output of diasporic intellectual elites from the Third World? We need to be careful not to confuse the sociology of the genesis of a particular body of theory with why that theory is sociologically important. The important question is whether "postcolonial theory" helps identify, describe, and analyze conditions-specifically "postcolonial" conditions-that are of great social significance in the contemporary world. And, if it does, a related question must be asked: How do such conditions articulate with global capitalism? Postcolonial theory has been variously described as being the cultural logic of late capitalism in the Third World (Dirlik 1994) and attacked for providing the theoretical tools to enact an evasion of the power of global capitalism (Miyoshi 1993). The second question that haunts postcolonial scholarship is that of the relationship between the universalizing descriptive or theoretical claims embodied in the notion of a unitary postcolonial theory, and the particular conjunctures of history, culture, and place that are the basis of such a generalization. What is gained and what is obscured in describing both Latin American and South Asian societies as "postcolonial" -or in using that term to refer to diasporic populations from Africa, Latin America, and Asia in Europe and North America? Is the term useful in discussions about minority populations in the United States? Do the processes of colonization provide a thread that unites these disparate settings and the experiences of the people living and working in them, despite their palpable differences? This brings me to the third question that the concept of "postcoloniality" raises, namely, the temporal connection to colonialism that is embedded in that term. Does "postcolonial" signify that colonialism is no more than a historical legacy in the present? Is the Third World now no longer subject to colonial or neocolonial modes of power and control? Would it be more fruitful to persist in emphasizing the continuing power of colonial discourses, institutions, and practices in the contemporary world by using terms such as "neocolonialism" or "imperialism" Introduction 7

(see Hall 1996:247)? Does employing the term "postcolonial" make one complicitous in a forgetting or denial of those relations of inequality that owe their effectivity to colonial domination?lO Ella Shohat has put the question most forcefully: "When exactly, then, does the 'postcolonial' begin? Which region is privileged in such a beginning?" (1992:103) .11 A burgeoning body of literature has raised searching questions about "the postcolonial" and has proposed alternative formulations to that term in an attempt to come to grips with the contemporary world situation (see especially the work of Ahmad 1995; Bhabha 1984, 1994; and Spivak 1987, 1988a,b, 1990; readers on "postcoloniality" include Ashcroft, Griffiths, and Tiffin 1995 and Williams and Chrisman 1993; and for a representative sample of the debate on postcolonialism, see Appiah 1991; Chakrabarty 1992; Dirlik 1994; Frankenberg and Mani 1993; Hall 1996; Loomba and Kaul 1994; McClintock 1992, 1994; Miyoshi 1993; O'Hanlon and Washbrook 1992; Prakash 1992a; and Young 1990). 'The postcolonial" has been used very differently across disciplines and in its application to diverse geographic territories. My aim in dealing with the questions raised above is not to attempt a resolution of the debate at the high level of generality usually employed but to take the more modest task of looking at the specificities of one cultural, historical, and geographic setting in northern India. This allows us to see how a conjunctural analysis might illuminate some of the questions surrounding "the postcolonial." I thus hope to move the debate beyond helpful, but also limiting, programmatic statements to SOciologically compelling representations of societies and social movements. Although the core of this book is ethnographic in nature, I have drawn on sources from different disciplines to address an interdisciplinary audience. My goal is not so much to resolve the debates around the postcolonial, debates that may well be intractable, but to offer a detailed study that might enable a more nuanced framing of the issues. My objective, ultimately, lies less in defending or attacking "postcolonial theory" than in seeing what kinds of political action and activism are made possible by alternative descriptions of peasant life. Does it make sense to talk of "the postcolonial condition" when analyzing the everyday lives of the subaltern in such a country as India? If so, how can "postcolonial theory" help in representing or conceptualizing poor people's movements of resistance and social transformation? 12 In this book, I attempt to delineate what "postcoloniality" might mean for one group of nonelite people in northern India. Colonial 8

Introduction

discourse bequeathed a set of dichotomies that were unusually "productive" in a Foucauldian sense in that they enabled the construction of a sociology that informed colonial institutions and practices. These colonial dichotomies continue to operate quite freely in the present, although perhaps not with the same valences. Of these dichotomies, that between modernity and tradition has proved to be the most enduring. The first axis-modernity-is associated with progress, development, "the West," science and technology, high standards of living, rationality, and order; the other axis-tradition-is associated with stasis or even stagnation, underdevelopment, the Orient, conventional tools and technologies, poverty, superstition, and disorder. Within this set of dichotomies, important realms of social life in "Third World" or "postcolonial" nation-states such as India have disappeared from analytic view. While being fundamentally shaped by colonial modernities, many of the everyday practices of the farmers I met in the village of Uttar Pradesh that I have named Alipur displayed a distinct lack of fit with the dichotomy of "modem" and "traditional."13 For the most part, these farmers were enthusiastic users of new irrigation technologies in the form of tube wells, of chemical fertilizers, and of scientifically bred, hybrid varieties of wheat. At the same time, their practice of agriculture was dependent on interpretations that drew largely from "indigenous" agronomical knowledges and categories. Was this a paradoxical situation that called for the ironic juxtaposition of "traditional" and "modem" practices? Or was it better seen as a mundane condition that constituted what Appadurai (1991) has creatively termed "alternative modernities" in the postcolonial world? Modernity may have been instituted as a global phenomenon through colonial capitalism, but it was, in the process, resisted, reinvented, and reconfigured in different social and historical locations. To emphaSize the multivalent genealogies of "modernity" in colonial and postcolonial settings, therefore, is to emphasize that the "non-Western" is not just a residual trace of a vanishing "tradition" but a constitutive feature of modem life (Rai 1993). One of the central arguments of this book is that the apparatus and discourse of development is a key to any definition of "the postcolonial condition." In the period after the Second World War, when the demise of direct colonial rule appeared inevitable, the apparatus of development institutionalized a new mode of global governmentality.14Inaugurated by the Bretton Woods institutions, a new era of global politics began that recognized the geographic division of the world into forIntroduction 9

mally equal nation-states. It was no surprise that colonialism, as a system of geographic conquest among competing Western nation-states, should have spawned movements of resistance along national linesthe nation was immanent in colonial rule. As movements of independence in the Third World led to the universalization and naturalization of the order of nation-states, however, a different regime of domination and management replaced the explicit administrative and economic control exercised during official colonialism. IS In this new regime of global governance, development discourses and institutions interpellated the newly independent nation-states of the Third World into particular temporal and spatial locations. Temporally, Third World nationstates were allochronistically positioned, that is, seen as being "behind" the West, as inhabiting a period that lay in the dim recesses of the history of the "developed" world. The term "allochronism," borrowed from Johannes Fabian (1983), labels the familiar process whereby regions in the Third World are thought to occupy the past, thereby denying that the poverty and underdevelopment of the many might be directly related to the current structures of inequality that result in growing wealth for the few. 16 Geographically, newly emerging nation-states, no matter what their position on the map, were located on "the periphery" of a world system whose center lay on the Euro-American axis. Thus, in using the term "postcolonial condition," I index a specific set of locations articulated by the historical trajectories of European colonialism, developmentalism, and global capitalism. I prefer to employ "postcolonial condition" instead of "postmodern condition" (see Harvey 1989) because colonialism is not considered a central structuring principle in creating the postmodern conditionY According to Stuart Hall (1996:249): "In the restaged narrative of the post-colonial, colonisation assumes the place and significance of a major, extended and ruptural world-historical event. By 'colonisation,' the 'post-colonial' references ... the whole process of expansion, exploration, conquest, colonisation and imperial hegemonisation which constituted the 'outer face,' the constitutive outside, of European and then Western capitalist modernity after 1492." My emphasis on the postcolonial condition is intended to drawattention to a specific conjuncture that has shaped the lives and experiences of people in rural India. Thus, I am interested in the institutions and discourses which position subjects and which configure their experience in particular ways, and not just with a body of theory that may be labeled "postcolonial." I use postcolonial theory because it enables me 10

Introduction

to describe and analyze compellingly the condition of subaltern, rural people in India, their agricultural and ecological practices, and their forms of political organization, and not just because I find it a creative and innovative new theory (although that would have been a sufficient reason for using it). In the first chapter, I show that what constitutes the experience of modernity as "postcolonial" in a country such as India is the acute selfawareness of this temporal lag and spatial marginality.Is Development discourses, with their built-in teleologies and spatial hierarchies, created subject positions that reinscribed inequalities after the dismantling of formal domination with the end of colonial rule. Thus "development" is about the economic position of a nation-state relative to others, but it is also crucially a form of identity in the postcolonial world. To be "underdeveloped" or "developing" is to be backward, deficient, inadequate, behind. The most important way in which questions of identity are hinged to development is through the metonymic association of the human life cycle with the growth of the nation. If there is an enduring trope in development discourse, it is that which equates "development" with adulthood and "underdevelopment" with infancy and immaturity. The temporal lag of postcoloniality is inscribed onto developing nations, anthropomorphized as less-than-fully-formed subjects, whose growth and maturity has to be supervised and monitored by those who have reached adulthood-that is, by the West. In this way, development discourse has served to naturalize the control of the "underdeveloped" world by the West after the demise of formal colonial rule. Development discourse, therefore, not only has served to subject the Third World to Western control through a phalanx of institutions and treaties but has also created the "underdeveloped" as a subject and "underdevelopment" as a form of identity in the postcolonial world. So far, I have spoken of "the postcolonial" condition in India almost entirely with respect to its imbrication in global discourses of development. This begs the following question: Is the formal end of colonial rule and the worldwide dissemination of the discourses and institutional forms of development the most important aspect of postcoloniality? And, if so, what is the relationship between postcoloniality and other global processes, such as that of world capitalism?19 Further, does positing a relationship between postcoloniality and late capitalism automatically lead to an endorsement of the use of metanarratives?20 In this book, I have employed two strategies to counter the (implicit) teleologies of metanarratives. But before explaining the two strategies, let Introduction

11

me interject that I wish to guard against the hasty equation often made between macrological explanations and metanarratives. The postmodern critique of metanarratives has too often been extended to any explanation that seeks to account for global phenomena such as capitalism, confusing closure with scale. There is, thus, an inadvertent substitution of time for space, as a critique of certain uses of time in historical narrative is extended to that of the use of space in geographic explanation. In Marx's story about capitalism, those features are linked, as the teleological unfolding of the narrative of capital requires its worldwide expansion. But there is no reason to believe that nonteleological explanations about capitalism as a global phenomenon cannot be advanced. Hence, it is a mistake to assume that a critique of teleology stands in for a critique of macro logical explanations. Some scholars have argued that a turn to "local" events and individual life narratives is a way to evade totalizing explanations. "Local" phenomena, however, are surely no less susceptible to totalizing, unsituated, and teleological representations than "global" onesY The first antiteleological strategy that I have employed is to demonstrate that resistances and contestations at different sites make the direction taken by macro logical processes such as capitalism and postcoloniality uncertain: examining these narratives in any detail at a particular site shakes one's confidence in pronouncing the direction in which they are heading. My second antiteleological strategy is to reject a single characterization of "the postcolonial." In the chapters that follow, I have chosen to investigate what postcoloniality might mean for the rural majority in India by examining shifts in national agricultural policies, transformations in the world food economy, changes in discourses of development, the everyday practices of farmers in the village of AIipur, and peasant mobilization at the regional and national levels. In each chapter, the emphasis is on a slightly different aspect of the postcolonial condition. To understand why certain kinds of agricultural policies were pursued, how they were implemented, and whether they were adopted by farmers, it is important to keep three different macrological frames in mind. The different temporalities of each macro logical frame created moments of overlap but also periods of disjuncture, and it is precisely in the affinity and differentiation between these three macrologies that something called "postcoloniality" came into being for rural people. The first macro logical frame, as mentioned above, is development discourse. After the attainment of independence in 1947, the nationalist 12

Introduction

Congress government, with the help of international "development" experts and institutions, decided to pursue a strategy of modernization that relied on the rapid establishment of heavy industry. This development strategy was also shaped by the alliances and conflicts of the cold war, during which the Indian government followed a policy of nonalignment, a political stance mirrored in its adoption of a "mixed" economy that combined state planning with capitalism. The development path adopted during the postcolonial era, however, was contested by, among others, the better-off members of the peasantry, who perceived that they stood to lose from policies emphasizing industrial growth. As a consequence, these development policies were modified in different postindependence periods. Thus, any macro logical account of the discourses, practices, and institutions of "development" must take into account its shaping by peasant resistance and activism: without an understanding of the effect of peasant resistance, therefore, we lose sight of the particular trajectory of "development" in India (see Chapter 1 for further details). At the same time-and this is the second macro logical frame considered in this book-the course of "development" was also defined by the changing nature of global capitalism. Regional differences in postcoloniality were perhaps most evident here. After the end of formal colonization, trade and multinational capital largely followed old colonial connections or neocolonial ones. For example, South Asia had closer links to British multinationals, whereas latin America had a "special" relationship to the United States. But as capitalist production itself shifted from raw material extraction in the colonies to the export of Fordism for the exploitation of low-wage labor and then to the present era of flexible accumulation and just-in-time production, it has led to and been accompanied by profound shifts in industrial and agricultural policies in postcolonial nation-states. At particular moments, as in the pressure put by multilateral institutions on indebted governments to adopt neoliberal policies in the 1980s, transformations in global capitalism have worked in concert with changes in development orthodoxy and the politics of nation-states. With the beginning of a renewed phase of capitalist expansion built on the rapid development of communication technologies and the tighter interconnection of financial markets, multilateral institutions and development orthodoxy shifted to the advocacy of neoliberal positions such as the reduction of fiscal deficits, the lowering of protective tariffs, and the opening of all markets to multinational corporations. Further, the collapse of a tottering Soviet bloc Introduction 13

shrank the room for maneuver available for Third World nation-states who could no longer playoff the superpowers against each other. At other times, however, as in the import-substitution strategies adopted by many Latin American countries and India in the fifties and sixties, "development" strategies embedded in the ambitions of nationalist leaders had a much more agonistic relationship with the centers of capitalist production in the West. The potential disarticulations between "development" and capitalism become even more complicated when one considers the third macro logical frame that I wish to draw attention to here. When studying agriculture in an "underdeveloped" country like India, one needs to take into account major international transformations in the technology of food production. Using techniques first developed in the program to breed high-yielding varieties of com in the United States, new varieties of wheat were discovered and successfully produced in Mexico and subsequently exported to India. These new wheats, called high-yielding varieties, or HYVS for short, but more popularly known as the green revolution, were dependent on high doses of fertilizer and water. After their introduction to India in 1967 on the heels of two years of severe drought and food shortages, national food grain production shot up to unprecedented new levels. This newfound self-sufficiency in food grains actually undermined the dumping of surplus production from the United States, cutting off a potentially lucrative market for multinational companies involved in grain production and transportation. 22 Any straightforward explanation following from the "interests" of agricultural capital would therefore be hard-pressed to explain the "export" of this new technology of food grain production. Two factors combined to produce the HYV strategy for national food self-sufficiency in the Third World. The first factor was the employment of the highly resource-intensive method of production geared to large commercial agriculture in the United States as a model; and the second factor was a paradigm of national development premised on mimicking the historical trajectory of industrial nation-states. Nationalism was thus not only assumed to be an overriding goal by Third World elites but also normalized as a universal project in the postcolonial world. This particular configuration of "postcoloniality," centered on the project of national self-sufficiency under the tutelage of the "developed" world, is being reshaped in the last decade of the twentieth century. A new technology of agriculture based on genetic engineering is threatening to alter methods of food production drastically all over the world. 14

Introduction

This time, however, there is a convergence between high-tech methods of food production, a neoliberal development regime, and late-capitalist firms interested in profiting from the sale of intellectual property rights. Hence there are shifts in the manner in which technologies of food production, the politics of nation-states, global regimes of development, and the organization of capital articulate with one another. Instead of reducing the explanation to one overriding principle, I have endeavored to maintain the tension between these phenomena, demonstrating how a conjunctural analysiS of postcoloniality can attend to moments of both disarticulation and articulation.23 Chapter 1 charts the moments of interlinkage and conflict between discourses of development, the world food economy, and the high-yielding varieties program. I pay particular attention to the interweaving of these processes in India from the mid-sixties to the early nineties. I intend to demonstrate that a rich and complex story about the interconnections between "development," the world food economy, and the green revolution can be constructed to enable us to understand what the condition of postcoloniality might mean for nonelite, rural people in the Third World. My objective is to convey a sense of both the connections between these macrologies and the contingencies that shape them at particular times and places. The green revolution is a good example of a technological phenomenon whose global reach and importance was not a foregone conclusion. After the "success" of the green revolution in India's tropical climate, the program was vigorously promoted by an international agricultural consortium to other parts of the tropical Third World. Had the program failed in India, even if the reasons for its failure had little to do with the high-yielding varieties themselves, it is doubtful that the green revolution would have been as enthusiastically promulgated as a "global" phenomenon. As my ethnographic analysis in Chapter 1 demonstrates, these "global" processes did not impose themselves on a pliant and unwilling peasantry: they were actively resisted, accepted, and modified in the process. The ethnography illuminates the extent to which a "global" discourse like "development" is profoundly transformed through crises of realization in different locations. In India, conflict between industrial and agricultural interests over definitions of development and about the implementation of development programs and who should benefit from them profoundly shaped the nature of agrarian "development." For instance, intraparty conflicts led Indira Gandhi to embark on a populist Introduction

15

path in 1971; soon afterward, however, groups of well-to-do peasant cultivators seized on this populism and employed it quite successfully against the state. Peasant groups, therefore, contested a particular hegemonic configuration of "development" and, in the process, asserted their own populist strategy of development in which rural areas would receive a larger share of benefits than had historically been the case in postcolonial India. The fact that oppositional populism employed the rhetoric of development indicated the success of development discourse in shaping the terrain of argumentation; however, the destabilization of a hegemonic notion of "development" was surely an important indication of the failure of the functioning of some universal and unitary process. Thus, it is important to maintain the tension between the universalizing and globalizing power of development discourse and its disputed and contentious redeployment in particular cultural and historical locations. The first chapter draws on bodies of literature from many different disciplines-anthropology, sociology, comparative politics, literary theory, policy analysis, development studies, and historyto construct a conjunctural analysis of the role played by agriculture in discourses of national development and of postcoloniality. In Chapter 2 I take a close look at the articulation of the green revolution-a state-sponsored technological transformation in the means of food production-with state-sponsored programs to bring the fruits of "development" to the poorest and lowest-caste people in rural India. I use narratives of village politics in Alipur, specifically those revolving around contests for the position of headman, as a means to analyze the links between the green revolution and the government's development schemes. Together, these processes have had far-reaching and sometimes quite unintended effects. Development discourses were central both to the green revolution, which was launched to increase agricultural production so as to preserve the sovereignty of the postcolonial nation-state, and to programs specifically targeted at lower-caste and poor people. In the context of severe class and caste inequalities in rural areas, one would expect rural elites to support subsidies for production but oppose subsidies and benefits for lower-caste and poor people. I show why rural upper classes actually ended up supporting government programs for the poor and how the substantial surpluses from serving as brokers in the implementation of government programs tremendously increased the stakes of winning the election for the headman's position, creating deep political divisions in village society. At the same time, government programs for lower castes have necessarily been ac16

Introduction

companied by a progressive social rhetoric of anticasteism and economic equality. Growing economic opportunities that enabled lower castes not to rely as heavily on agricultural labor in the village, together with the rhetoric of social equality and the dependence of the upper castes on the electoral support of the lower castes, led to a phenomenal transformation in the confidence with which lower-caste people dealt with erstwhile landlords and other socially superior groups. Younger, lower-caste men, still primarily wage laborers, publicly criticized uppercaste people, something that their fathers would not have dreamed of doing. Lower-caste people also mounted a challenge to a vision of "development" in which it was assumed that economic change would trigger transformations in caste and social relations. They criticized state officials for not implementing development programs properly but also condemned the slow pace of social change. In this way, they questioned nationalist claims that the postcolonial state would liberate the nation from the poverty and caste oppression that colonial rule had wrought. Questioning the state's ability to bring about development was also to put into doubt its claims to postcoloniality. Contestations of the state's claims of fostering "development" reveal that the postcolonial condition is distinguished by heterogeneous temporalities that mingle and jostle with one another to interrupt the teleological narratives that have served both to constitute and to stabilize the identity of "the West." And what exactly does that mouthful"teleological narratives of identity formation" -mean? Chapters 3 and 4 are devoted to unpacking this formulation by ethnographically examining indigenous discourses of agronomy and ecology in one particular postcolonial setting. In Chapter 3 I provide a close analysis of indigenous knowledges of agronomy and their relevance to the agricultural practices of farmers in Alipur. As in other green revolution areas, farmers in the village used chemical fertilizers and electric tube wells to grow hybrid varieties of wheat. At the same time, their agronomical interpretations stressed that the health of a plant depended on the properties that were transmitted to it from fertilizers, irrigation water, and the wind and how those properties affected the balance of humors-of hot, cold, dry, and wet elements-necessary for its good health. Moreover, humoral understandings were constantly intermingled with those derived from "scientific" agriculture. When asked to account for particular agricultural decisions, farmers drew on "indigenous" and "scientific" understandings of agronomy as well as on the politics of class and caste in production relations. For example, a farmer might explain why Introduction

17

he did not irrigate his crop by talking about his recent conflict with the neighbor who usually supplied him irrigation water. But, at the same time, he might also point to the fact that the land did not "demand" more water, and because he had not applied any "hot" fertilizer, he did not need to irrigate the land to "cool" it as often as may have been necessary for other farmers. An understanding of agricultural practices, therefore, could not simply be deduced on the basis of indigenous knowledges alone, nor were practices intelligible entirely from the perspective of the politics of production relations. Indigenous knowledge and indigenous people have come to occupy a privileged place in development discourse as well as in antimodern discourses, especially in the last decade.24 In the third chapter, I question the notion of the "indigenous" and make a series of closely related arguments about its promise and problems. Any critique of "indigenousness" has to confront a central dilemma, which I have tried to navigate especially carefully. My struggle in this book has been to point to the limitations inherent in the notion of "indigenousness," while recognizing the strategic importance of that form of identity and supporting the political movements based on claims to indigenousness forged by some of the most marginal and disempowered people in the world. My argument is based on the premise that a theory of cultural difference used by anthropologists to analyze "indigenous knowledge" and "indigenous people" that emphasizes systems of meaning can be separated from the political project of supporting the struggles of subaltern peoples, some of whom may indeed find it strategically efficacious to claim an "indigenous" identity. I employ theories of "postcoloniality" in the belief that a cultural theory which stresses the hybridities and impurities that are the legacy of colonialism and global capitalism and which recognizes the continuously transforming impact of global inequalities on the lives of marginal people in the Third World can better account both for the conditions in which claims to indigenousness are politically effective and for those situations which do not allow such claims to be mustered. By pointing out that "indigenous knowledge" is not a static or closed system but is itself heterogeneous, hierarchical, and infused by relations of power and inequality; that "indigenousness" is a conjunctural location rather than an essential identity; and that the effectiveness of "indigenous" identity depends on its recognition by hegemonic discourses of imperialist nostalgia, where poor and marginal people are romanticized at the same time that their way of life is destroyed: in this manner I intend to highlight that claims to indige18

Introduction

nous identity are, as Spivak (1988b:13) has termed it, a "strategic essentialism." In other words, claims to indigenousness entail staking a terrain within an unfolding war of position. That raises the following set of questions for me: When theorists of culture see resistance to colonial, capitalist, and ecological domination primarily in terms of indigenousness, where does that leave the majority of the subaltern and most desperately poor people in the world who cannot claim such an identity? Can an understanding of cultural difference be robust enough to account, on the one hand, for why "indigenousness" turns out to be such an effective cultural identity for some marginalized groups in the contemporary world and, on the other hand, for why so many of the world's most disempowered people cannot be helped by such claims? To give a flavor of the argument in Chapter 3, I contend that a close study of indigenous knowledges and practices of agronomy and ecology reveals that they do not stand in as clear an opposition to the West as their most ardent advocates and staunchest critics would like to believe. Both the proponents of Western science and those of indigenous knowledge accept the duality between "the West" and "the indigenous," differing mainly in that they affiliate with opposite poles of that duality. But in advancing a position in which the closure of narratives of the identity of the West is attained through its alterity with the indigenous, what is overseen, suppressed, or erased? What does a critical examination of the indigenous tell us about the postcolonial condition? Does the recent revival of interest in indigenous knowledges serve to construct "the modern" in the process of criticizing it? I argue that these uses of indigenous may be closer to the concept that it seems to have supplanted-the traditional-than its supporters would like to acknowledge. "The indigenous" and "the traditional" are distinguished by being outside of and resistant to "the modern." They are defined by their status as residual categories of the "modern," and it is therefore not surprising that they are most frequently to be found in postcolonial Third World locations. In fact, a longer history of "the indigenous" would show the critical role that it played in colonial and nationalist discourse. In both, the indigenous was the source of a lost, authentic, national culture that needed to be recuperated. Nationalists did not simply want a return to that authentic culture but an updated, modern version of it that would give national culture a distinctive position in the world of nation-states. The nationalist position found its echo in some versions of development discourse that sought to preserve or salvage indigenous knowledge as an eco-friendly, sustainable alternative to the ravages of modernist progIntroduction

19

ress. One way to mobilize discourses of indigenous knowledge in analyzing the agricultural practices of the farmers of Alipur would have been to emphasize the use of humoral agronomy and substantivist theories. Yet this mode of analysis could not have accounted for the use of industrial inputs, the commingling of humoral accounts with bioscientific ones, or the manner in which development programs shaped farmers' agricultural decisions. It is precisely these unexpected intersections-the legacy of the modernist projects of colonialism, nationalism, and development-that I have identified as being central defining features of the postcolonial condition. Postcolonial theory provides the analytic framework to describe these hybrid discourses and practices and to delineate the intertwining of "local" practices with global and national projects of development. It unsettles the binaries of colonial and nationalist thought in pointing to the imbrication of the indigenous in modernist discourse (Hall 1996:244, 247).25 Postcolonial theory, therefore, enables a different kind of understanding of indigenous practices and discourses, one which does not seek to determine whether something is authentic, original, or uncontaminated but which accepts cultural hybridity as a starting point in political projects that seek to empower subaltern, poor, and marginal groups. In my use of notions of "hybridity," I am careful to underscore that it denotes a set of locations that are formed by structural violence and stratified by different kinds of inequalities. In Chapter 4, the analysis of indigenousness is extended to questions of ecology by examining farmers' practices and discourses surrounding land quality and water resources. Farmers in Alipur were often quite critical of the impact that green revolution agriculture had on the strength of the soil but were sharply divided as to the exact causes for why that had happened. Similarly, they were conscious that the groundwater level was falling very quickly and that if it continued to decline at the same pace, it would completely destroy agriculture in Alipur. Although there were many different explanations offered for the drop in the groundwater level, including the absence of normal amounts of rainfall, there was substantial agreement that the introduction of tube well technology had been the primary cause for the depletion of groundwater. The declining strength of the soil and falling groundwater levels, in turn, were thought to have an adverse impact on the health of humans. According to villagers, this was due to the detrimental properties imparted to the grain by chemical fertilizers, the displacement of more 20

Introduction

nutritious grains by the monocropping of wheat, and the consumption of cheaper and less nutritious food because of the need to preserve cash for purchasing inputs. Indigenous understandings of the interlinkage between the health of the soil, the health of plants, and the health of humans, therefore, were combined with a critique of green revolution technologies and their associated market-based demands. At the same time, however, farmers also expressed their satisfaction with the increased incomes and surpluses that the new agricultural technology had generated. In this manner, farmers had conflicting and contradictory assessments of the effects of the most important and visible "development" intervention in their lives-the green revolution. As with agronomical knowledges, ecological practices and discourses were marked by their startling juxtapositions and hybrid explanations, precisely those markings of postcoloniality that I discuss in Chapter 3. From the rather detailed and specific discussion of the ecology of agriculture in Alipur in Chapter 4, I shift perspective to a much more global scale in Chapter 5, which deals with the politics of global environmentalism, exemplified by the Rio Accords. Just as global phenomena such as the green revolution have serious implications for the ecological practices of farmers in Alipur, so do global environmental treaties threaten to alter the relationship between farmers and their use of resources. And just as farmers in Alipur participated in peasant groups that criticized an urban-centered, ecologically nonsustainable development model, global treaties and neoliberal regimes have spawned movements of resistance that are forging transnational alliances between peasants and other grassroots organizations across the world. Chapter 5 raises questions about the effect of global environmental treaties on the everyday lives of subaltern peoples. Are environmental treaties, such as the Rio Accords, indeed produced for the "common benefit of humankind"? And, if so, why were so many of the purported (nonelite) beneficiaries in the Third World opposed to them? Or are such transnational accords as those signed at the Earth Summit better seen as novel forms of regulation and control that have become necessary with the transformation of the nation-state? In particular, I argue that environmental problems and global treaties draw our attention to the growing tension between nation and state. As all participants at the Earth Summit realized, environmental problems have raised new questions for a system of nation-states founded on the principle of territorially based sovereignty. This system of sovereign nation-states had beIntroduction

21

come consolidated in Europe by the beginning of the eighteenth century (Tilly 1975a) and provided the basis of colonial competition and the orderly transition to a postcolonial world. Global environmental problems and treaties are problematizing this coupling of nation and state. I deploy Ruggie's (199P65) notion of the unbundling of territory to suggest that the hyphen between nation and state has been put into question. My objective is to explore the implications of this phenomenon of the unbundling of territory for understandings of postcoloniality. One of the most important consequences of the unbundling of territorially based sovereignty is that it problematizes theories of neocolonialism. It does so because notions of neocolonialism hark back to a model of competition between nation-states that formed the basis of colonialism. 26 Instead, I advance the strong claim that if the term "postcolonialism" is to be used to signal a temporal rupture-as that which comes after colonialism-then it may indeed be an appropriate marker of new forms of global regulation and control in the waning years of the twentieth century. The term "postcolonial" oscillates continuously between marking an era that comes after the demise of formal colonial rule and denoting an analytic approach that attempts to go beyond the binaries of colonial discourse. Whereas proponents of postcolonial theory wish to emphasize the latter aspect, critics have focused on the temporalizing claims implicit in the notion of "postcoloniality." In my discussion of the postcolonial condition so far, I have concentrated on the heterogeneous temporalities and cultural hybridities that go into constituting social life in postcolonial societies. The analysis I present in Chapter 5, however, suggests that we may be witnessing a more decisive temporal break with the order of nation-states that underlay colonialism than has been the case so far. Thus, postcoloniality in the strong sense, as an era that goes beyond the world of colonialism, may now, as never before, be an appropriate indicator of global social relations. While I have great sympathy with the view that the "post" in "postcolonialism" is too often taken to mean that colonial forms of domination have faded into the dim recesses of the past, is it possible that elements of colonialism have been taken intact and configured into a new series of global domination? In other words, I argue that despite the fact that particular features of social life display a continuity with colonialism, they have been reconstituted as part of a different pattern of global control in which the nation-state no longer promises to play the central role it once did. To speak of postcoloniality, then, is to speak of the decline of the entire order of competitive nation-states that nurtured 22

Introduction

and sustained colonialism. It has been appropriately noted that the term "postcolonial," most often used to mark the era initiated by formal decolonization, sometimes underappreciates the real continuities between the colonial period and its immediate aftermath. However, the decline of the order of nation-states made visible in global environmental problems and regulations does indeed appear to signify a fundamental shift that might justify the use of the "post" as a temporal marker. The processes described in Chapter 5, therefore, might very well indicate the consolidation of the "postcolonial condition," a global process of regulation and control that does not depend as centrally on the nation-state as did its predecessor. 27 These shifts in the nature of "postcoloniality" draw attention to the imprint of differing tempos of the end of formal colonial rule on diverse places. This century has been marked by successive waves of loosely clumped decolonizations since the late forties. By the time the satellite states of Russia that constituted the former Soviet Union broke free from its direct control, in countries like India the heady optimism proclaiming the dawning of a new age, where anything was possible, had already faded into oblivion. By the end of the eighties, a generation of Indians with no direct experience of colonial rule, whom Salman Rushdie (1980) has evocatively termed "midnight's children," had grown into adults and occupied positions of power. The expectation of rapid "development" that would lead to India's formation as a "modem" nation had been replaced by a rather thorough questioning of the entire project of modernity (Nandy 1984, 1987a; Kothari 1990). Colonized elites who had seized the reins of the state after independence, convinced that the avarice of colonial rulers was keeping their nation poor, themselves expressed grave doubts about the project of "development." The "failure" of modernity has been articulated by activists and scholars in a variety of debates on topics as diverse as secularism, medicine, the environment, education, development, and science and technology (apart from the work of Nandy and Kothari already cited, see Alvares 1992; Das 1990; Marglin and Marglin 1990; Shiva 1988, 1991, 1993b; Visvanathan 1988). In my treatment of postcoloniality, I have chosen to focus on "development" because of the centrality of those discussions of modernity for the agricultural sector. The faith in development, activated in the period after independence, had in common with colonialism a narrative of the telos of the nationstate. The questioning of development and of the project of modernity has also brought in its wake a questioning of the sanctity of the nation Introduction

23

and a profound skepticism about the nationalist project. It is in the context of this "postcolonial condition"-the inability to realize the promise of a modem nation-state (Nandy 1992:264)-that we have to situate the emergence of theoretical currents such as subaltern studies and postcolonial theory. A full explanation of these intellectual trends lies beyond the scope of this book; obviously, any explanation would have to account for the multiple and complex intersections between intellectual production and changes in the social world. 28 Profoundly shaped by the failure to constitute a modem nation that mimics the development trajectory of "the West," postcolonial theory has had much less influence in locations or with groups that have had a longer period of formal independence, such as parts of Latin America; among people who are still colonized, such as native peoples in North America; and in places where the optimism of nationhood has not yet led to the disillusionment of postcoloniality, as in the former Soviet Union and in South Africa. The differing tempos of decolonization are preCisely what need to be emphasized in comparing or contrasting different postcolonial conditions; for this reason, it is a mistake to use "the postcolonial" as a synonym for "the Third World." The differing tempos of decolonization draw our attention to the play of similarity and difference that has to be analytically maintained in any attempt to understand "the postcolonial" dilemma. On the one hand, it is important to see modernity, colonialism, capitalism, development discourse, and international science as global phenomena that have farreaching and systematic consequences for the regions that they affect. On the other hand, it is crucial not to overlook the differences in the forms taken by these global phenomena in multiple locations, differences that arise from contestation, reworking, and rearticulation. The opposition between "the global" and "the local" itself depends on a spatialized dichotomy that needs to be questioned. My concern, therefore, is not to replicate the implicit spatial hierarchy constructed in speaking of the articulation of "the global" with "the local." Even scholars who do not dismiss "the local" as irrelevant end up privileging "the global" as that which brings change, whether positive or negative, to "the local." Whether it is the capitalist world system or modem modes of bureaucratic organization, military force, systems of thought, or scientific knowledge, the directionality of change, at least as far as the Third World is concerned, is usually depicted as being onesided: from "the West" to "the rest." These narratives very often fail to acknowledge that "the global" too originates from some location: Euro24

Introduction

centric assumptions are thus smuggled in at the same time that they are being theoretically disavowed. Chapter 5 consists of an analysis of discourses on the global environment, which reveal this mechanism of disavowal most clearly. Thus, the challenge in analyzing global/local interactions is to be able to acknowledge simultaneously the historical inequalities resulting from colonial control and capitalist expansion and yet acknowledge the overdetermined nature of particular conjunctures and the situatedness of the theoretical and popular discourses surrounding them. A further step that we need to take in thinking about the relationship of the global and the local is to question the spatial assumptions that enable such a duality to be constructed. If we take the nation-state as an originary unit of spatial organization, does "the global" stand for that which lies beyond the nation-state and "the local" for that which lies within it? In other words, does this duality depend on a naturalization of the nation-state? If the dichotomy between the global and the local is implicitly shaped by the nation-state, what do changing configurations of the nation-state imply for this distinction? In the concluding chapter, I explicitly address this question by looking at new forms of governmentality and their corresponding modes of resistance that are making this distinction a problematic one at the end of the twentieth century. As a diasporic subject ambivalently located within the spaces of nationstates, it would appear proper that I should find postcolonial theories and identities to be a compelling subject. Yet the research project that provided the data for this book was not motivated by an interest in postcolonial theory. A brief history of this project, the methods used in fieldwork, and the textual strategies that I have employed in writing this book might be useful in helping contextualize both its content and style. I came to do anthropological research quite by accident. After high school, I followed the path usually taken by immigrants from the South Asian subcontinent by obtaining undergraduate and graduate degrees in engineering. But I found my interests shifting to "development," and when I undertook a Ph.D. in Engineering-Economic Systems at Stanford, I devoted a substantial chunk of my course work to understanding economic development. During my studies, I discovered that questions of power and inequality were peripheral to large areas of development studies and that the lives, hopes, and fears of the subaltern were rarely addressed in most disciplines that dealt with "development." I decided Introduction

25

to conduct a research project for my dissertation that involved empirical work at the grass roots, and it was with this resolve that I first went to do fieldwork in the village of Alipur in 1984. The fieldwork was to be part of my project on the rate and direction of technical change in agriculture. When I first reached Alipur, I found myself the object of some suspicion. Learning where I had come from, villagers quite naturally wanted to know "why the Americans had sent me there." Did I work for the CIA? Or perhaps I was not a foreign agent but one recruited by the Indian government to determine how much villagers ought to be taxed. When I tried to explain that I was studying agriculture, they were genuinely puzzled. Why would someone be sent from a country with such "advanced" agriculture to a place where there was hardly any machinery? What could possibly be learned from studying agriculture in such a "backward" place? But the elders remembered another young man who had come to "study" there almost two decades earlier. "He kept asking us questions-he wanted to know everything, including how many handheld hoes we had!" they recalled. "Do you want to do the same kind of study?" I was grateful to that earlier researcher in more ways than they realized. After all, one of the reasons why I had chosen Alipur as a "good" field site was that there was a "baseline" socioeconomic survey that I could use to document the changes that had occurred in the last quarter of a century. The village had been surveyed initially by a team from an institution of agricultural economics in Delhi and then resurveyed several years later by another group from the same institution. After some searching, I finally managed to track down a researcher who had conducted one of the earlier surveys, who convinced me that the data he had collected were not trustworthy. It dawned on me that if I could not trust the data collected by an institution which specialized in this task, what degree of confidence could I possibly have in the "avalanche of numbers"29 that was generated to produce knowledge about rural India by a variety of state bureaucracies since the late nineteenth century (B. Cohn 1987a; Appadurai 1993b)? I gave up the idea of measuring changes from a baseline and proceeded to fashion a very detailed survey of agricultural practices, closely modeled on the earlier surveys done by the agricultural institute. My goal was to study the relationship between technological changes in Indian agriculture and shifts in class relationships. The rapid acceptance of green revolution technology in the countryside had inspired "the mode of production" debate in scholarly journals in India. 30 The question that ran through this controversy was 26

Introduction

whether a capital-intensive and capitalist technology would lead to increasing class divisions that in tum might create the conditions for revolutionary insurgence. In other words, would the "green" revolution tum red (Gough and Sharma 1973; Sharma 1973)1 This was not idle speculation; in the late 1960s, a movement led by landless peasants in Naxalbari had turned into an armed revolutionary struggle in the state of West Bengal, absorbing the national imagination in the manner that Chiapas has more recently done in Mexico. 31 Both supporters and opponents of the green revolution, therefore, watched its effects with bated breath and debated whether the countryside was ready for a revolutionary upheaval. By the time I went to do fieldwork in 1984, it was clear that the revolution in the making in rural India was not red but, in Daniel Thorner's droll phrase, "steel grey" (cited in Thorner 1982:1963). Capitalist agriculture seemed well ensconced and thriving in the Punjab, Haryana, and, most recently, western Uttar Pradesh. But, although there had been various statistical studies of agriculture, there were very few ethnographies that documented the relationship between the new technologies and the transformations in the manner in which class inequalities were actually lived in rural India. This, then, was what I had hoped to record in my fieldwork. How did the new technologies of production alter the everyday lives of the rural poor? How did it change class relations? Was the introduction of a much more capital-intensive method of agriculture clearly sifting rural society into capitalists on one side and the landless proletariat on the other?32 When I came back to Stanford to start writing my dissertation, I realized that the themes that interested me had more to do with the politics of the green revolution than was evident from the painstakingly collected quantitative production data on which I had spent most of my time in Alipur. In doing the survey, however, I had learned much about farmers' beliefs and understandings of agriculture, and I used this knowledge to explain why certain technologies of agriculture had been adopted and had flourished. I moved away from my dissertation project for a few years (except to collect more data in two rounds of further fieldwork in 1989 and 199192). Teaching in social science departments first at the University of Washington and later at Stanford helped me to gain a better appreciation for a range of anthropological concerns and methods and to situate anthropological work within a wider interdisciplinary field. I grew more concerned with the relationship of identities to shifting structural conIntroduction 27

texts, especially in the light of academic reconceptualizations of culture as a spatialized marker of identity (Gupta and Ferguson 1992, 1997; Gupta 1992). When I returned to this project, I had completely rethought its analytical frame and had obtained so much more data that I proceeded to write this book anew. It was no longer an extension of the dissertation project but a different project altogether, with different goals and substantially new data. The book came to be centrally concerned with the politics of postcolonial identities rather than the green revolution, although the argument crucially hinges on the importance of the latter for questions of identity through a consideration of discourses of development. Because the rest of the book is concerned with explicating this theme, I will not dwell on the topic here; instead, I would like to address my choice of methods and of textual construction. Having taught a graduate seminar on methods for the past two years, I have been surprised at how little most authors say about their methods. When I read an ethnography, I do not expect to find a lengthy discussion about field methods or even an obligatory discussion thrown into the introductory chapter. But what surprises me is that there is often no statement whatsoever about how the data were obtained. I do not naively believe that enumeration is an index of quality and that the number of hours of interviews or observation or the length and detail of surveys are necessarily fruitful indicators of the quality of the research. But I do think that it is minimally useful to indicate whether the material for a chapter was obtained from participant-observation, surveys, interviews, news reports, posters, or literature generated by other ethnographers. One should not have to scan footnotes and keep guessing as to how authors know what they claim to represent. In raising these questions, I take the risk of falling short of these standards; however, I have endeavored to state clearly the methods that I have used at the beginning of each chapter. Ethnographers have almost never exclusively employed participantobservation in their monographs, relying on other written sources such as archives, news reports, pamphlets, statistical data collected by states and international agencies, other kinds of audiovisual information, and secondary literature generated by other academics. Despite this fact, participant observation continues to be implicitly coded as the most legitimate source of "real" data. 33 Therefore, part of my interest in seeing a more explicit account of methods is to create room for acknowledging that anthropologists do and should legitimately use a variety of research methods in pursuing their agendas. How important a role ethnography 28

Introduction

plays in different research projects should depend on the questions that the anthropologist seeks to illuminate. Even within a monograph, some chapters might rely more heavily on observation, others on life narratives, and still others on the analysis of statistical data or textual analysis. Stating what they rely on might help readers decide how to interpret the analysis, as well as open up the field of possibilities of what "anthropological analysis" does or should do. There is then the further question of how one goes about constructing a text. Clearly, methods of fieldwork and techniques of representation are closely linked. Both-the claims made in an ethnography and the presentation of the ethnographer's knowledge-are shaped not only by the kind of data collected but also the manner in which those data were obtained. I should clarify that my use of the term "data" is intended to include different types of information, sense-data, feelings, and memories and is not intended to have solely objectivist connotations. There is, by now, a body of creative work in anthropology that draws attention to diverse questions of representation: how the ethnographer is positioned within the text, questions of polyvocality, the representation of respondents' voices, problems of translation, the "staging" of dialogic encounters, concerns about authorship, the use of photographs and audiovisual techniques, and anthropologists' responsibility to their subjects and respondents. Although I do not intend to deal with each issue here, my positions will be apparent from the choices I make in the text. But I do wish to draw attention to one feature of the manuscript that may help explain my position on other issues of representation. One of the primary goals guiding the selection of data, the representation of data within the text, and the manner in which I have presented my own commentary and understanding is that I have aspired to write a book that encourages reinterpretation. Of course, all books are open to reinterpretation. But I think that it is reasonable to maintain that some ethnographies allow greater room for rereading than others. It goes without saying that authors carefully select what data to present, how to present these data, whose voices should be included and whose excluded, and what topics are addressed in a text. On any given topic or event described in an ethnography, conflicting and multiple perspectives are usually to be found. Should an ethnographer represent all of them? The most important ones? How does one decide what is important? Once that decision has been made and a few main positions identified, how should the voices of the different people articulating those perspectives be represented? How should the ethnographer's own presIntroduction

29

ence be acknowledged in generating those different perspectives? These are by no means easy questions, and they resist unitary responses: there is simply no formula to determine the "right" approach. What I have tried to do in this book is to emphasize differences in perspectives on a range of questions. I attempt to include at least some voices representing the different positions that I heard. To do this without undue repetition and to convey the thoughts of different people while keeping the flavor of their own voices has been a real challenge. I have used long quotations wherever possible to impart not only the content of individuals' utterances but also its timbre, texture, and tone. My effort to display contestation and disagreement is not simply a textual device but a choice driven by the argument of the book. If the postcolonial condition is marked by the contradictory juxtaposition of incommensurable discourses in the everyday lives of rural people in northern India, then it behooves me to provide evidence of this fact. Similarly, because my argument is that different discourses are juxtaposed on one another instead of being synthesized into a new, overarching system of meaning, I do not present an analytic frame that unifies the argument. In other words, in my text I do not attempt to demonstrate an analytic mastery over the data, sealing off all the loose ends into one coherent, authoritative explanation. For to do so would edit out all the material that did not fit the explanation, which is indeed the "normal" process by which scholarship proceeds. It is precisely for this reason that the phenomena that I have documented in this book have not received the kind of attention they deserve. In contrast, my effort to embrace what would be considered "the excess" flows out of an analytic concern that the distinctive feature of the material under consideration is that it resists a unifying explanation, that it does not lend itself to that kind of analytic closure. This also makes the text "vulnerable" to reinterpretation and rethinking, and it is precisely this vulnerability that I have tried hard to achieve. Odd as such a claim might appear in the face of a model of scholarship in which the attempt to control and to gain mastery is considered a virtue,34 I think that it is one of the essential qualities of a good ethnography. "Vulnerability" has perhaps an unnecessarily defensive connotation; what I seek to achieve is a text that invites rethinking and reanalysis. There continues to be a fairly large gulf between the humanistic bent of most postcolonial theory and social-scientific scholarship on agricultural issues in disciplines such as anthropology, rural sociology, political 30

Introduction

science, geography, and agricultural economics. 35 In weaving my way through a complicated set of issues having to do with postcolonial conditions, alternative forms of modernity, development discourses, and the institution of new forms of governmentality, I endeavor to employ postcolonial theory on topics with which it has normally not been associated. Those studying agriculture and political economy are skeptical of the doctors of discourse, who they fear are too entangled in texts and theory that bear little connection to the lives and fears of the subaltern. In turn, those studying representations and discourses are wary of the metaphysics of presence in the descriptions and analyses offered by scholars of agriculture. 36 My objective is to bridge this gap and initiate a critical dialogue between disciplines and, equally important, to present an analysis that could be useful to further the objectives of social movements: I am convinced that a sharpened understanding of the. forces that threaten to push the world's poor beyond the edge of survival will help us better resist these forces. If intellectuals are to claim an affiliation with these processes of resistance, then it is surely important to go beyond the territorial claims to topics and methods asserted in diSciplinary boundaries. It is for this reason that I draw on a range of disciplines-development studies, literary theory, feminist theory, cultural geography, political science, sociology, ecology, history, and agricultural economicsto construct this text. My objective is to write an ethnographic text that employs methods considered central to anthropology, as well as methods used more frequently in adjacent disciplines. For this reason, people in different diSciplines might find in this book something that speaks to their chief concerns and methods but much that is different or foreign to their way of thinking about these questions. By now, the call for "interdisciplinary" work is quite old. It is already more than a decade since Geertz declared genres to have blurred (1983:19-35). Yet, the power of institutional procedures being what they are, genuinely interdisciplinary work is still not very common. The recent enthusiasm for cultural studies has seen scholars attempting to emulate its emphasis on combining methodological interdisciplinarity with activist political engagement. In my own case, I started out attempting to understand the class implications of the "green revolution" in northern India. That project led me to an examination of the nature of the development regime in the post-Second World War period and the world food economy, on the one hand, and the detailed ethnographic study of indigenous understandings of agronomy and ecology Introduction

31

in one village in northern India, on the other. In showing the tight interweaving of phenomena usually dubbed as global and "macro" and those conceptualized as local and "micro," I have also attempted to bring anthropologists and their concerns into conversation with those in other disciplines. Any book that covers the range of topics, disciplines, and levels of analysis as does this one will have sections that some readers will find closer to their interests than are others. I have written each chapter so that it can be read independently, and I will now try to indicate which sections of the book might appeal more to which audiences. Those interested in postcoloniality, development, local/global connections, nationalism, agricultural policy, social movements, and South Asia should find the entire book to be of interest. Those primarily concerned with agrarian politics and global food regimes will find Chapters 1, 2, and 5 to be relevant. People who are struggling to come to terms with "the indigenous" might have some sympathy with my own efforts in Chapters 3 and 4. For those interested in the social history of technology, Chapters 1, 3, and 4 will be most useful. Finally, readers whose primary concerns are ecological will find that Chapters 4 and 5 speak most directly to their concerns.

32

Introduction

1 Agrarian Populism in the Development of a Modern Nation

I

n this chapter I attempt to delineate what the "postcolonial condition" means for some rural subjects of a "modern" nation-state. Taking Appadurai's insight that there are other histories and modalities of being modern than the one that has characterized "the West" (1991), I endeavor to investigate ethnographically what such "alternative modernities" might consist of by considering the role of development discourses in postcolonial India. To assert that modernity takes different forms, given the specificities of particular historical situations, would perhaps be accurate enough but would remain at the level of a truism. One needs to ask, What makes for a specifically postcolonial experience of modernity? And how is that experience shaped by conjunctural relations of inequality that crisscross global, national, regional, and local levels to form particular fields of power? I argue that the postcolonial period in India is characterized by the distinctive character of the relationship between modernity and development. "Development" has served as the chieflegitimating function of ruling regimes and as the most important "reason of state" in independent India. This is quite ironic, for developmentalism, in its evolutionary assumptions, in its essentialization of differences, in its presumption of homogeneity within areas considered essentially different, and in its narratives of progress, shares a great deal with colonial, and specifically Orientalist, discourses. Rather than argue that "development" becomes a means to recolonize the Third World, I demonstrate that it enters a series of relationships that institute a new form of government rationality. I borrow the notion of governmentality from Foucault (1991) and extend it to refer to those novel institutional modes for

the global regulation of populations, bodies, and things, of which development is a primary example (see also Scott 1995).1 Here, I analyze the development of agriculture as a critical link in the forging of a "modern" nation. Global discourses of development and international food regimes playa central role in shaping the evolution of national poliCies and agricultural practices at the local level. One of the most important ways in which discourses of development have affected the everyday lives of villagers in North India is through populist politics, policies, and programs. Populism not only has been the medium in which the discourses and practices of development are conveyed to villagers but has also provided one of the critical axes along which oppositional groups have organized support for their actions. The failure of development forms the rallying cry for oppositional groups to coalesce. Accordingly, I pay attention both to governmental and oppositional populisms and to their changing relationship over time. If postcolonial modernity is defined by the centrality of "development," then populism, especially agrarian populism, is its most important feature. Because I have attempted to bring together an unusually ambitious set of scholarly literatures in making the argument here, a word about method is necessary. I have positioned historical changes in national agricultural policy within the broader framework of the global food economy and international discourses of development. Since the latter are intended mainly for contextual purposes, I have resorted to the secondary literature to explain the specificities of populist policies and their reception in India. My explanation of populism concentrates equally on state policies and regional movements. Here, I have used the writings of those who formulated policy, newspaper accounts, and the secondary literature. Finally, to interpret what populist policies meant to rural folk in western Uttar Pradesh, my ethnographic fieldwork proved invaluable. In what follows, therefore, I use a combination of methods derived from anthropology, sociology, policy analysis, and political geography to address the intimate connections between what are sometimes represented, I believe erroneously, as discrete levels of analysis-global, national, regional, and local. I begin this chapter by attempting to locate the central role played by agriculture in the development of a modern nation. I first analyze development as a modernist discourse and next look at the role of agriculture in colonial and nationalist ideas of "progress" in India during the late nineteenth century and in the two decades immediately preceding independence. These connections between agriculture and modernity 34 Postcolonial Developments

were to be transformed by the institutionalization of development and by the structure of the world food economy in the era that followed the Second World War. Postcolonial discourses of development in India reflected a tension between "industry-first" and "agriculture-first" strategies, which was eventually defused by a famine that led to a crisis of sovereignty and the green revolution. The origins of agrarian populism lay in this crisis of sovereignty, which is the subject of the second section. The green revolution was instituted during the tenure of Indira Gandhi as prime minister, and it was at that very time that she turned to populist programs. To understand why that happened, I first briefly examine the theoretical literature on populism to see the links posited between populism and "underdevelopment." Next, I investigate what it was about Indira Gandhi's rhetoric and policies that qualified them as populist. The section ends with a consideration of how populism was "received" by its audience and what enabled it to succeed among the poor and dispossessed. The third section concerns the deployment of populism by oppositional groups based in the class of well-to-do owner-cultivators. The first part briefly sketches a history of the most important populist peasant party in North India, the Bharatiya Kranti Dal (BKD). After the demise of the BKD in 1987, a new group called the Bharatiya Kisan Union (BKU) took over and organized a series of successful protests. I closely examine the populist ideology and tactics of the BKU, both the features which have made it so successful and those which have limited its appeal. Because development has played such a central role in the legitimation strategies of postcolonial regimes, the failure to implement development has proved to be an effective strategy for antigovernmental mobilization. Indira Gandhi's own populism relied on an attack on previous regimes for failing to make the fruits of development available to the poor. The BKU, therefore, took the rhetoric of the crisis of development from the ruling Indira Congress and turned it against the regime, making corruption and the government's antirural policies its two main planks. The BKU'S success resulted from a clever combination of specific complaints with a broader critique of the industry-first, urban-based vision of a modern nation being pursued by successive governments. The last section of the chapter situates the struggle over agrarian populism in India in the broader context of changes in the global food economy in the seventies and eighties. Populist struggles within the country took a different turn with the imposition of a structural adjustAgrarian Populism 35

ment program, the signing of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), the advent of a new kind of plant biotechnology rooted in genetic engineering, and the entry of food-sector multinationals. 2 I consider the reaction of well-to-do peasants to these transformations in greater detail in Chapter 5. This chapter ends by noting that the terrain on which populist struggles in the agricultural sector were based has irrevocably shifted as a result of the transformations in the world food economy in the two decades since the early seventies. A particular strategy of development, in which agricultural subsidies played a central role to ensure national food self-sufficiency, is being replaced by an export-oriented, "market-friendly" direction. Because such a path overtly deviates from the history of the "developed" countries, it has thrown into question the possibility of achieving modernity through mimicry. Is it any wonder then that development itself is increasingly being questioned as a desirable goa1?3

The Place of Agriculture in a Modern Nation

To speak of modernity is less to invoke an empirical referent than a selfrepresentation of the West. In this self-representation, consciously built on a difference with another (the "Orient," the "rest"), the West emerges as the "model, the prototype and the measure of social progress" (Hall 1992:313). As Hall (1992:277) points out, "the 'West' is an historical, not a geographical, construct." In speaking of "the West," I refer to the effects of hegemonic representations of the Western self rather than its subjugated traditions. Therefore I do not use the term to refer simply to a geographic space but to a particular historical conjugation of place, power, and knowledge. The "modem," the celebration of Western progress, civilization, rationality, and development, came to be instituted as a global phenomenon through colonialism and through multiple and diverse modes of governance and domination in the postcolonial world (Hall 1992). After the formal demise of colonialism, one of the chief mechanisms by which this self-representation has been promulgated has been through the discursive formation known as "development" (Ferguson 1990; Escobar 1995). Development is a discourse that rehearses, in a virtually unchanged form, the chief premises of the selfrepresentation of modernity: the belief in teleological narratives; the idea that "progress" occurs along a Single path; the conviction that "Western," industrial countries have already arrived at the telos (although it would be more accurate to say that they were always already 36

Postcolonial Developments

there); and, finally, the notion that it is nation-states, configured according to a particular logic of territorial exclusion and certain concepts of sovereignty, that constitute the basis of analysis and action. "Development," in other words, is Orientalism transformed into a science for action in the contemporary world. 4 This self-representation of modernity, as promulgated by the models, doctrines, policies, programs, institutions, and discourses of development, is an inescapable feature of everyday life in contemporary northern India, as in many other parts of the world. To live in the village that I have called Alipur is to confront in many different contexts, shapes, and forms the self-representation of modernity through the discourses, institutions, and practices of "development." When I speak of alternative forms of modernity, I refer in this minimal way to an experience of being, in which the self-representation of modernity is a pervasive and omnipresent fact. At the same time, as will be amply clear in what follows, it does not mean that people in rural India lead, or aspire to lead, "Western" lives. What, then, does it mean to say that there are other ways of being modern? To the extent that teleological views of history, a belief in progress, a conviction of one's own backwardness compared with the "West," and a naturalization of the spatial imperatives of the nationstate operate to configure the self-understandings of postcolonial subjects, they are indeed profoundly within the space and spell of "the modern." But it is also clear that the state of being modern is not a homogeneous experience, not just across the world, but within the political and geographic space of the nation-state. So what accounts for the difference of "the modern" in India? Clearly, one of the differences lies in the fact that the properties of "the modern" adumbrated above underspecify its contents. Employing a teleological narrative of history, for example, says almost nothing of its contents. This was evident in the deep conflicts between colonial and nationalist interpretations of the past, both of which were committed to teleological narratives. 5 There is, however, another factor which to my mind is far more critical. What makes Indian modernity different is that the fact of difference itself is a constitutive moment that structures the experience of modernity. In other words, what makes the experience of modernity different in India is that, within experience, the self-representation of modernity is never absent. It is found not as an "absent presence" in the way that "the rest" is to conceptions of "European" identity but as an active presence, as present-to-itself. For this reason, the attempt to 10Agrarian Populism 37

cate "India" precisely in the narratives of modernity-premodern, antimodern, just plain modern, or postmodern-is doomed to failure if it refuses to recognize its own complicity with the self-representation of modernity. To search for premodern or antimodern critiques of "development," therefore, as many prominent intellectuals are currently doing, is to occupy a space of opposition created by modernity's representation of itself. 6 This is not to deny the importance of articulating alternatives to "development." To the contrary, it is to argue that the search for alternatives can begin only by rigorously acknowledging the impossibility of transcendence. 7 Modernity's representation of itself is a social fact in the villages of northern India, and not "merely" an analytic choice available to the scholar.8 That most social science continues to employ modernity's self-representation as well is a separate, if related, question. The particular form in which self-representations of modernity are deployed most frequently in the Third World is through development discourse. The symptoms of "underdevelopment" are clearly revealed through its agricultural sector. If a high proportion of the net domestic product is dependent on agriculture and if a large proportion of its labor force is employed on farms, then the nation-state is pronounced to be afflicted with the malady of "underdevelopment" (Varshney 1995:200). For this reason, the development of agriculture is an index of the health of the nation. The normalized narratives of development constructed from the "stylized" facts of a few nation-states reveal that agricultural surpluses, extracted by taxation and savings, form the basis on which industrial expansion takes place. 9 Food self-sufficiency, as we shall see, becomes a crucial geopolitical issue. For all these reasons, the agricultural sector is absolutely central to the development of a "modern" nation-state. In the rest of this chapter, I argue that one cannot understand the project of "developing" the agricultural sector in India without seeing how populism shapes its ideological climate, institutional structures, and the daily practices of different rural subjects. Development practices are crucially shaped by different appropriations of populist policies and the struggles that ensue from those. Understandings of development are largely dependent on the standardized use of certain kinds of aggregate statistics: national income, employment, trade, output, population, and so on. Although no doubt valuable for some purposes, such statistics do not always reveal what the experience of everyday life means for people in a particular "development regime." 38

Postcolonial Developments

"Development" as a modernist discourse Development has thus become one of those words-like security or democracy-which apparently requires no definition, for everyone knows, instinctively, what it is. It is what "we" have.-Kate Manzo, "Modernist Discourse and the Crisis of Development Theory"

Even an archaeologist of "development discourse" would pause to wonder at the remarkable consequences of the apparatus that was put into place at Bretton Woods in 1944, when the World Bank10 and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) were created (Mason and Asher 1973:11-35; Meier 1984:10-23; Lumsdaine 1993).11 A regime of development took over where formal colonial rule came to an end. 12 As newly independent nations joined the table at the United Nations (UN), they were put into a prefabricated slot, namely, that of "underdeveloped nations" (Pietsch 1981). Through a small and standardized list of selected indices-gross national product (GNP), savings, investment, population density, production, input/output ratios, and balance of payments-operating on an already chosen division of "sectors" -agriculture, industry, infrastructure, transportation, and energy-countries were deemed to be suffering from the malady of underdevelopment (Escobar 1995:3-4, 2324). The power of development discourse is evident in the declaration, on President Kennedy's suggestion, of the 1960s as the United Nations "Development Decade" (Lumsdaine 1993A7). A full history of the rise and proliferation of the development apparatus remains to be written. 13 My intention here is to focus on one very specific aspect of this story. I do not, therefore, intend to summarize theories of development but merely to pick up on a few, less-noted aspects that critics of development have pointed out. The particular aspect of development that I wish to explore becomes evident when we ask who is being referred to when Manzo states that "development" has become a self-evident concept, so that "everyone knows, instinctively, what it is." In other words, what is being proposed here is the formation of a certain kind of subject. This subject position is well captured in the memorable words of Ivan Illich, commenting on the extraordinary effects of the Bretton Woods institutions: "Scarcely twenty years were enough to make two billion people define themselves as underdeveloped." 14 Development discourse makes people subjects in both senses that Foucault emphasizes: subjected to someone else by a relationship of control and dependence, and tied to one's own identity through self-knowledge (1983:212). "Developed" and "underdeveloped" are not just terms that indicate the position of nation-states in an objecAgrarian Populism 39

tive matrix defined by quantitative indicators, as the formal operations of the development apparatus-exemplified by the tables of the World Bank's annual reports-would have us believe. They are also, and to my mind far more importantly, forms of identity in the postcolonial world. To be "underdeveloped" is to be a national community that is inferior, backward, subordinate, deficient in capital and resources, an inadequate member of the international order, and (by extension) a shabby imitation of the "developed." But "underdevelopment" is a condition that reveals something else as well. It displays to the developed a vision of their own past. The reason that it does so is that countries are assumed to follow certain established paths to "development." Sometimes this is conceptualized as a unitary, fixed path with pre given stages; at other times, there may be an acknowledgment of the possibility of a finite number of multiple routes to the stage of being "developed" (see especially Nandy 1992:264). I realize that such a broad characterization does not do justice to the diversity and subtlety of positions found in the development literature. But it has the virtue of focusing on something which is so basic and obvious that it can easily be overlooked. What I wish to emphasize is that however the paths or strategies to achieve development are described, the means to that end is assumed to be mimicry. In all the shifts that development discourse has undergone in the past half century, from an obsession with growth rates to basic needs, poverty alleviation, a focus on the poorest, growth with redistribution, participatory development, sustainable development, and back to "market reform," the constant element has been that the strategy of development should be mimicry. To learn, follow, replicate, repeat, improve-these are the incitements of development discourse. And the subject that does all this learning and following is the nation-state. Development thus brings together the phenomenon that Johannes Fabian (1983) has called "allochronism" (the displacement of "others" in the 'Third World" to the past) with that feature of colonial discourse that Homi Bhabha (1984) has termed "mimicry." Like colonial mimicry, development discourse produces the less developed countries (LDCS) as a reformed and recognizable Other, "a subject of difference that is almost the same, but not quite" (Bhabha 1984:126). Again, as in colonial mimicry, one finds that development discourse is subtly but pervasively racialized, so that underdevelopment connotes not only economic backwardness but also a lower position in the global racial hierarchy.ls Yet whereas the ambivalence of mimicry produces subjects who at once 40

Postcolonial Developments

resemble the colonizers and function as a source of uncertainty in the authoritative discourse, both faithful image and virtual menace, development discourse produces subject nations that present an ambivalent image of the past of the "developed." This temporal displacement has profound consequences for the project of "development" for another reason, namely, that the life stages of personal growth serve as a metonym for the growth of the nation. Many scholars have by now pointed out the superimposition of images of national development on the life stages of humans (Nandy 1987b; Manzo 1991). Nations are "newly born," their economies take time to "grow," and their markets and political systems finally "mature" when they are fully developed. David Ludden, for example, notes that" 'underdevelopment' and 'developing' imply immaturity and unrealized potential; development discourse is replete with the assumption that the realization of potential lies in mature capitalism" (1992:247) .16 The pervasiveness of these figures of speech, I suggest, elevates them from the realm of "mere analogy": here is a discourse that explicitly maps the bourgeois individual subject of the West onto the nation-as-subject. One of the implications of the metonymic relationship between the life cycle of the individual and the nation is that in the "family of nations," the LDCS occupy the role of children vis-a.-vis the "developed" nation-states (Manzo 1991:1416).17 Therefore, to be a national subject in an "underdeveloped country"-for example, to be a citizen of India-is to occupy an overdetermined subject position interpellated by discourses of the nation and by the discourses of development to which that nation is subjected. 18 There is, however, another consequence of the metonymic association of the nation and the life cycle of the individual subject that serves as a source of uncertainty in the otherwise definitive discourse of development. The allochronism of development, I have argued, presents to the West an image of itself at an earlier stage of its life cycle. In the teleological narrative of development, LDCS represent the "childhood" of the West, the early stages of growth, which one day, given adequate nurture, financial and technical support, and education from their "parents," will join the ranks of adult nations (Nandy 1987b:57; Manzo 1991:14). In development discourse, the narrative of the past of "developed" countries is completely depoliticized, memories of underdevelopment conveyed in the measured tones of the "stylized facts" of economic abstraction. What matters is that they got out of it, moved from then to now, from poverty to wealth, from want to plenty, from "underdevelopment" to "development." It is a tale of triumph in which the Agrarian Populism 41

overcoming of hardship and poverty, the ability to negotiate a series of experiences successfully, provides the story with an essential coherence which justifies the moral and political leadership of the West and which provides development with an inherent legitimacy. Representations of the past, therefore, are central to development narratives: they prove that progress has, in fact, taken place. It is because of the importance of narratives of progress that mimicry serves to destabilize development discourse in quite a different way than it does colonial discourse. It does so not only by offering to the powerful an ambivalent image of themselves ("almost the same but not quite") but also by opening up the invisible seams in the Western narrative of progress. Faced with the violence of its effects in the "Third World," development discourse forces the West to confront a version of its own "childhood" in which colonial violence, ecological destruction, the genocide of native peoples, and the repression and displacement of its poor otherwise find no place. The costs of development in Guatemala bring up the genocide of native North Americans at the quincentennial celebrations of Columbus's "discovery" of America; the destruction of rain forests in Brazil's "Amazonian frontier" raises troubling questions about a strategy of growth that mimics the North American frontier experience perhaps all too closely. Within development discourse itself, therefore, lies its shadowy double: not the return of the repressed, not a distorted image of itself, but a virtual presence, inappropriate objects that serve to open up the "developed world" itself as an inappropriate object, that ensure the strategic failure of development not only by the ambivalence of mimicry but by the lack of closure of the self-narrative of progress as well. Agriculture in colonial and nationalist discourses of progress

Development discourse shares a great deal with notions of "progress" commonly employed during the colonial period. What makes the postwar period distinctive, apart from the founding of institutions whose specific function was to produce and propag~te ideas about "development," was the adumbration of a formal comparative theory founded on replicable and largely ahistorical models. By contrast, theories of progress under colonialism, created on the premise of mimicry, remained faithful to the specificity of the historical experience of particular colonizers. The remarkable similarities between discussions of "progress" during the colonial era and those of development today have been emphasized by Bipan Chandra (1991) and Ludden (1992). Ludden, noting 42

Postcolonial Developments

that the "cognitive terrain" of development has "remained remarkably stable" since the early nineteenth century, identifies its chief features as "(1) ruling powers that claim progress as a goal, (2) a 'people' whose condition must be improved, (3) an ideology of science that controls principles and techniques to effect and measure progress, and (4) selfdeclared, enlightened leaders who would use state power for development and compete for power with claims of their ability to effect progress" (1992:251-52). Ludden further argues (260-61) that the institutional structures that were to nurture and sustain this "cognitive terrain" were well in place by 1900. There are thus strong continuities to development discourse between the colonial and postcolonial eras. But just as we need to attend to these enduring patterns, we also need to remember that development discourse was enunciated from multiple positions and that the danger of representing it as a homogeneous formation is that it renders superfluous or epiphenomenal its internal fractures, debates, and discussions. 19 In the discussions and debates that surrounded "progress" during the colonial era, agriculture, the primary source of employment, occupied a very prominent, if unfavorable, position. In the second half of the nineteenth century, according to Chandra, both colonizers and their native critics agreed on the importance of industrialization. Anticolonial intellectuals argued that the cultivation of arable land was close to its limit and that agriculture was incapable of absorbing a larger number of workers. Therefore, the only solution to easing the pressure of population on the land lay in developing industry, which in any case represented a higher stage of civilization (Chandra 1991:88-89). Although debt relief and tenancy legislation were proposed as short-term measures, there was little discussion of changing agrarian relations, and lower land taxes and the provision of cheap credit were considered important long-term measures necessary to encourage peasants to invest in their lands (127). The progress of agriculture was thought to be dependent on the growth of industry, which represented "the onward march of civilization" (91,132). Colonial strategies of economic growth foreshadowed the neoconservative, market-oriented structural adjustment packages prescribed by the Bretton Woods institutions in the past decade, once again drawing our attention to the presence of enduring patterns of social relations in the global economy and to the longevity of the colonial legacy long after the formal demise of colonialism. The main components of the British strategy of economic growth were "(0 the provision of law and order, Agrarian Populism 43

(ii) the promotion of private property rights in land, (iii) the development of foreign trade on the basis of the free trade principle, (iv) the promotion of means of transport, and (v) the investment of British capital. The logic of private gain, individual enterprise, and the operation of the market would then take care of development" (Chandra 1991:94). Political stability, unambiguous property rights, opening markets to world trade, development of infrastructure, foreign development aid: this was a list that could very well have come out of a World Bank handbook. 20 Indeed, British writers stressed how well the Indian economy was doing in the second half of the nineteenth century, comparing it favorably with European countries (82-83).21 It was hoped that permanently fixing the revenue demand from land and eliminating intermediaries between the cultivator and the state would provide incentives to landowners to invest in agriculture. When that failed to happen by the mid-nineteenth century, the colonial state began to expend resources in the building of irrigation infrastructure such as canals (Ludden 1992:269).22 The emphasis on industrialization has continued unchanged, with different inflections, unto the present. 23 Among leading anticolonialists, the two main positions on the agrarian question were more similar than their protagonists would have dared to admit. One side argued that industrialization was a precondition for agricultural improvement, and the other, that the application of scientific knowledge to agriculture was the most urgent task, given that the economy would continue to depend mainly on agriculture in the foreseeable future. 24 In 1901, the Indian National Congress pledged its support to agricultural "improvement" in a resolution declaring "that the Government should be pleased to bestow its first and undivided attention upon the department of agriculture and adopt all those measures for its improvement and development which have been made in America, Russia, Holland, Belgium, and several other countries so successfully in that direction" (cited in Ludden 1992:272). The association of progress with science and industrialization proved invincible even in the face of criticism from a person like Gandhi, whose anti-industrial position was well known. 25 In 1928, the Royal Commission on Agriculture in India recommended that the government set up an Imperial Council of Agricultural Research, which would help coordinate agricultural research and policy. There was thus widespread agreement among both colonial officials and nationalists on two issues: the subordinate role to be played by agriculture in India's

44

Postcolonial Developments

progress, and the application of scientific knowledge and scientific methods to improve agricultural productivity.26 As we shall see in the story that follows, these themes did not disappear but were reinvigorated with the launch of the green revolution in the late 1960s. But some important differences existed between the progressivist narratives of the colonial period and the developmentalist narratives of the postcolonial nation-state. Discussions of agriculture in India were mediated by the wider context of the world food economy, which was to change drastically between 1930 and the development era that followed the Second World War. To understand the transformations in the global food regime so as to set the context for much of what followed, I will first sketch the contours of food aid in the immediate postwar era. Postwar food aid: Marshall Plan for the free world

Between 1870 and 1929, the world food regime was based largely on exports to Europe from the settler colonies-the United States, Canada, Australia, and Argentina. 27 European imports of wheat went up sixfold in this period, a growing demand that was met largely by increased production in the settler colonies. This food regime collapsed during the Great Depression, and a new system came into place with postwar reconstruction. The postwar food order was to provide a stable backdrop for the era of decolonization and "development." Its origins lay in the price supports given to domestic production in the United States during the New Deal and exports of American agricultural products to rebuild Europe during the years of the Marshall Plan. Commodity support programs initiated during the New Deal created huge surpluses, the disposal of which became a central problem for the u.s. government. Between 1948 and 1952, 29 percent of Marshall aid was for food and agriculture (Friedmann 1990:17). All told, foreign aid was largely responsible for a ninefold increase in wheat exports between 1945 and 1949. By 1950, subsidized foreign aid constituted 60 percent of all American agricultural exports (Friedmann 1982:5261). The form of aid to Europe-loans in nonconvertible local currencies-was to be later generalized with Public Law (PL) 480 aid to the Third World. There was a critical difference between Marshall Plan aid and PL 480 aid, however, which had to do with the different locations that their recipients occupied in the agro-industrial complex (Friedmann 1990:16-17; 1993:35-39). Marshall Plan aid avoided the dumping of U.S. surpluses, concentrat-

Agrarian Populism

45

ing on providing food for immediate consumption needs and for feed and fertilizer to rebuild European agriculture (Friedmann 1982:5261; 1993:36). Rebuilding agriculture in Europe, however, implied the adoption of policies of domestic subsidies that mimicked the U.5. model. Despite the negative effects of such policies on European wheat imports, the United States supported European protection of wheat and dairy products in exchange for exempting maize and soy from import controls. The reason for this apparently contradictory move was the growing importance of the livestock sector in the increasingly meatbased diets of the postwar era. 28 Techniques for the factory farming of poultry and cattle had raised the demand for industrially produced feedstock that was heavily dependent on hybrid corn and soybean production. The model of a nationally organized, price-subsidized, importcontrolled agricultural sector implicit in the Common Agricultural Policy of the European states, therefore, coexisted with a transnationally organized livestock sector that integrated American corn and soy producers with a transatlantic livestock industry based on factory-farming principles. It was only after the end of Marshall Plan aid and after the Korean War, which absorbed most U.S. government grain stocks between 1950 and 1953, that the problem of disposing of surpluses came to be solved through sales to Japan and through aid to the newly independent countries of Asia and Africa. Title 1 of PL 480, which accounted for the bulk of food aid (70 percent of all food aid from 1954 to 1977), was directly patterned on the European experience of sales in local currencies. In the two decades from the early 1950S, world wheat exports increased by 2.5 times, of which the U.S. share increased from just over a third to more than half. Most U.S. exports took the form of aid: almost 70 percent in the decade 1956-65 and close to 50 percent from 1966 to 1970. On the receiving side, Third World imports grew from 19 percent of the world's share in the late 1950S to 66 percent a decade later (Friedmann 1982:260-71; 1992:372).29 In the process, Third World countries that had been exporters, or insignificant importers, at the end of the Second World War became dependent on wheat imports, primarily those available at subsidized rates from the United States. There were many reasons for this, not least that regimes could keep urban consumers and industrialists happy with low food prices, even though the dumping of American wheat meant that the agricultural sector suffered (Friedmann 1990:18-19; 1992:372).

46

Postcolonial Developments

But the main reason lay perhaps elsewhere: in the models of development that were being employed by the newly independent nation-states of the world. As should be evident from the discussion above regarding debates in colonial India, industrialization signified the status of being developed in these models. Although the archetypical development narrative consisted of the dynamic complementarity of industry and agriculture within a national economy (Friedmann and McMichael 1989:93), it operated with a conviction that the scientific application of development expertise would allow newly independent nation-states to leapfrog the gradualist path to prosperity. Development discourse envisioned applying the Fordist speedup of production to the social engineering of nations. Significantly, taking the fast road to industrialization meant keeping wages low so that domestic industries could flourish and bypassing the foreign exchange constraints to the purchase of capital equipment. In this equation, subsidized food from the United States was a great boon because it allowed states to save all their foreign exchange for industrial goods. Cheap food for the urban proletariat also enabled industrialists to keep the wage bill low. It was hoped that the growth of industry would enable the absorption of surplus labor from the countryside, thereby raising the average productivity of labor, and that it would also lead to increased demand for agricultural goods, both food and cash crops. The alternative strategy, similar to that being followed by postwar Europe, would have meant high support prices to boost agricultural output and, consequently, high food prices for consumers. Scarce resources would then have had to be diverted from potential industrial ends to agriculture, with high food prices hindering industrial growth by increasing the wage bill. The imperatives to "catch up" for those nation-states that were "behind" were thus very different from those of European nation-states "rebuilding" after the destruction of the Second World War. Postwar food aid, therefore, played a very important role both in Europe and in the Third World, but participated in very different strategies of growth and reconstruction. The model of food aid embodied in PL 480 appeared to be an extension of Marshall Plan aid policies, but food aid to the Third World became part of a completely different set of strategic, international, sectoral, and class relationships. This food regime, dominated by U.s. concessional aid policies, was to last until the early seventies and forms the backdrop against which agricultural policies were to be formulated in postcolonial India.

Agrarian Populism 47

Agriculture In postcolonial discourses of development

Postcolonial discourses of development in India continued to reflect the tension between those segments among the ruling elites who emphasized industrialization at all costs and those who thought that, because industrial growth depended on adequate and reliable supplies of food, the first task of the new nation-state should be to raise agricultural productivity through the application of scientific knowledge. This tension was evident in the very first Five-Year Plan (1951-56). The Draft Outline of the First Plan, a discussion document, made agriculture, rural development, irrigation, and power its centerpiece, assigning 43 percent of total expenditure to these concerns (Frankel 1978:86). It stated that "the shortage of food and raw materials is at present the weakest point in the country's economy" (in Frankel 1978:86) and that continuing shortages in this sector would inhibit a faster tempo of development in the future. The Draft Outline stressed the need for increased irrigation and the application of chemical fertilizer to improve yields, as well as the advantages of intensive agrarian development: "Those areas should be selected where, on account of irrigation facilities or assured rainfall, additional effort is likely to produce the more substantial results" (88). As we will see, in its logic and rhetoric, this development path anticipates the green revolution by many years. There was another, very different, view of agriculture, however, which ultimately prevailed in the final version of the First Plan. In this view, the widespread use of intensive methods of cultivation was not feasible because few farmers could afford expensive inputs such as fertilizers and irrigation. Given the high person-to-land ratios, it was felt that agricultural productivity would be best increased by giving small farmers and agricultural laborers incentives to undertake laborintensive techniques to raise yields. In the four decades ending in 194647, the marginal productivity of labor had declined, as had food production per capita (Blyn 1966:93-126). "Grain yields were low, not only in comparison to advanced countries, but with respect to countries at roughly the same stage of development. Average paddy yields per acre in China were estimated at almost twice the Indian level" (Frankel (1978:96). The plan thus emphasized the productivity-enhancing potential of land reform, cooperatives, community development, and other institutional changes. It aimed to reach a quarter of the rural population through community development programs, with the hope that from the third year (1953) of the plan onward, the government's financial 48

Postcolonial Developments

contribution would be negligible, as "people's participation" would ensure the success of the strategy (Frankel 1978:100-106). This view received further stimulus during the Second Five-Year Plan, which undertook an explicit strategy of rapid industrialization. 30 Since the outlays for the First Plan were constrained by commitments to large infrastructural projects initiated before it was drawn up, it was in the Second Five-Year Plan that a coherent ideology and strategy of development was first articulated by the postcolonial regime. In this strategy, there was an even more marked shift to the path that put industrialization first. New investment in the public sector, chiefly for heavy industry, was allocated at two and one-half times that of the First Plan. By contrast, the proportion of total expenditure allocated to agriculture declined to almost half its previous level (Frankel 1978:131). Because of the plan's almost single-minded commitment to heavy industry, there were precious few resources left for investment in agriculture. At the same time that the planners were redirecting all available savings to the industrial sector, they were keenly aware that growth in agricultural output was of crucial importance. Nehru called agriculture "the keystone of our planning" and pointed out that "inspite of all that we have to do for industry, the fact remains that agriculture is the solid foundation on which we have to build. It is from agriculture and from the increasing production on the land that we can build up our surpluses for future growth" (Nehru 1988:371).31 The idea that industrial growth would spur the demand for agricultural goods, combined with a belief that institutional changes in the rural areas would release forces that would boost productivity, led the planners to emphasize changes such as land reform, the rebuilding of institutions of village governance on democratic principles (the panchayat system), and tenancy reform, instead of direct investment in agricultural infrastructure and input or output subsidies. It was estimated that food grain requirements would double in the decade covered by the Second and Third Plans; however, the proposed investment in agriculture was enough to ensure only a 15 percent increase in total output (Frankel 1978:136-37). The rest, therefore, was expected to result from the social changes that would alter the relationship between different strata of agriculturists and the land, in particular, the incentives that land reform and tenancy reform would give to the poor to increase output. In this regard, the example of China loomed large for Indian policymakers. Between 1952 and 1955, various groups of Congress Party offiAgrarian Populism

49

cials and Planning Commission members, Nehru and P. C. Mahalanobis (the architect of the Second Plan) most prominent among them, visited China to learn firsthand how the Chinese were going about "developing" their country and came back impressed.32 For Indian policymakers, China provided both a model and a competitor in the race for development. China was at the "same stage" of development as India, it was pursuing a policy of rapid industrialization along the classic model of squeezing surpluses from the agricultural sector, and it was increasing agricultural production through massive agrarian reforms. Nehru explicitly rejected the comparison of India with the industrially advanced countries of the West because, he argued, they already had 150 years or more of industrial growth and thus faced problems different from those confronting poor countries in Asia. The most important person behind the Second Plan, the statistician Mahalanobis, later commented that "China provided a better model of development for India than the advanced western countries" (in Frankel 1978:125).33 There were several reasons why this was so: China had embarked on state planning whose object was to accelerate the process of development so that it did not take as long as Western countries had historically taken to become "developed"; China was at "the same stage" in the development process as India; both countries had "similar" problems in high population pressures on the land, unemployment, and low levels of productivity; and both countries had to struggle to find sufficient surpluses for industrial growth and to generate foreign exchange reserves to import much-needed capital goods (Frankel 1978:120-41). Nehru articulated Indian policymakers' ambivalent attitude toward China most clearly, eager to profit from China's experience yet expressing a competitive envy toward it: "We know for a fact that some other countries have rapidly increased their food production in the last few years without any tremendous use of fertilizers. How has China done it? China's resources in this respect are not bigger than ours. China is at the same time laying far greater stress on industrial development and heavy industry than we are. Yet, they are succeeding in increasing their agricultural production at a faster pace than we are. Surely, it should not be beyond our power to do something that China can do" (Nehru 1988:394; emphasis added). Nehru had previously noted that "we differ, of course, in our political and economic structures, yet the problems we face are essentially the same. The future will show which country and which structure of Government yields greater results in every way" (73; emphasis added).34 Nehru's statements underline the importance of postcolonial compe50

Postcolonial Developments

tltlOn among "less developed countries." Competition between the "backward" nation-states adds a twist to the insight that development discourse situated underdeveloped countries in a prior historical stage and gave developed countries the status of models to be emulated. Added to the mix of allochronism and mimicry is an element of competitive learning that flows horizontally in the time-space of nationalism, from one "backward" nation-state to another. Thus, while Nehru completely accepted the central role of industrialization-the model which posited that there were different stages to development and that countries like India and China occupied a lower stage in the narrative of progress than the industrialized West-he also acknowledged the possibility of multiple routes to industrial development. The Western example of "development," with its long gestation period, was clearly unacceptable as a temporal trajectory. At the same time, Indian intellectuals since the 1920S had been keenly aware of the incredibly high growth rates achieved by the industrialization strategy of the Soviet Union. Perhaps more than the Soviet Union, China, with its huge agricultural sector and high person-to-Iand ratio, appeared to offer a strategy that adhered to the general model prescribed by development orthodoxy while offering a different, faster path that drew, moreover, on the rhetoric of anticolonialism, national sovereignty, and self-sufficiency.35 China functioned as model, competitor, and alternative, a country with "essentially similar" problems, resources, and goals but (and this was crucial to someone like Nehru) a different-nondemocratic-political system. The Chinese example of the reorganization of agrarian relations of production, however, ran into insuperable difficulties in India's federal administrative structure. 36 All the institutional changes that the central government wanted to bring about-land reform, tenancy reform, the setting up of cooperatives, reinvigoration of village governance through the panchayat system-were, in fact, dependent on state governments for their implementation, as these were all state "subjects" in the division of powers stipulated by the Indian constitution (Varshney 1995:3031). The leaders of state governments were mostly men who were beholden to the dominant agrarian classes and to merchants who traded in agricultural products for financial and electoral support. 37 By contrast, the dominant coalition at the national level was more heavily influenced by the monopoly bourgeoisie and bureaucratic and military elites, although agrarian interests were not entirely absent (as the section on Chaudhary Charan Singh in this chapter makes apparent). 38 Agrarian Populism 51

Even during the heyday of the Second Plan, at the zenith of an industry-centered development strategy, there were important voices arguing for putting agriculture first. These positions resulted partially from the failure of the Second Plan's agricultural policies. Production fell by 10 percent between 1956-57 and 1957-58, food prices jumped by nearly 50 percent, and the government was forced to import a total of six million tons of food grains in those two years. This led to a severe balance of payments crisis, which nearly derailed the industrialization strategy (Frankel 1978:142-43; Toye 1981:42-44). The food minister, A. P. Jain, warned that measures to force down the price of food grains, such as socialization, forced purchase, or curtailment of interstate movements, would be counterproductive because they would provide disincentives to farmers to increase production. What was needed, instead, was an agricultural strategy that emphasized "scientific" practices and remunerative prices. Greater investments in seeds, pesticides, and fertilizers, not organizational changes, were the preconditions to growth in agricultural output (Frankel 1978:144-47). Although such arguments were given short shrift during the Nehruvian period because of the single-minded pursuit of industrialization, there were other important reasons why investment in scientificindustrial agriculture was to prove to be much more attractive later. 39 The Indian government could, and did during 1956, draw on heavily subsidized PL 480 wheat. 40 Further, the revolution in corn production following the breeding of hybrid varieties in the United States had not yet been replicated for the main cereal crops of the subcontinent: rice, millet, and wheat. A technological "revolution" in food production was in the works, however, one that was to have enormous consequences for the story of Indian "development." Food production, nationalism, and the green revolution

The consequences of the technological revolution in food production known as the "green revolution" have been the subject of heated debate. 41 My concern, for now, is not with the immediate consequences of green revolution agriculture in India but with the assumptions it embodied. In this section, I wish to demonstrate that the search for green revolution technology and its subsequent implementation depended on certain taken-for-granted propositions that combined in equal measure a normalization of the U.S. experience, Malthusianism, and nationalism. The origins of the green revolution lie in the invitation to the Rocke52

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feller Foundation in 1941 extended by the Mexican government to provide technical assistance for raising yields of basic food crops. After a preliminary survey, a team of four scientists, including Norman Borlaug, started work in 1943 on breeding "better" varieties, improving soil management practices, and increasing the productivity of domestic animals. In the course of the next twenty years, the Mexican program was to increase the production of the three basic foods-corn, wheat, and beans-by 300 percent (Stakman, Bradfield, and Mangelsdorfl96n-6). More important, it was to serve as an exemplar to Third World countries in Latin America and Asia of what could be achieved by the application of "scientific methods" and a top-down, production-based strategy. Apart from its status as a model, the Mexican program had more concrete effects in that hybrid varieties bred in Mexico were successfully exported to other countries with similar agronomic conditions (216-321). There is a curious anomaly that lies at the heart of all the narratives about the green revolution, including the story told by the "three ancients" who advised the Rockefeller Foundation on its Mexican strategy, Elvin Stakman, Richard Bradfield, and Paul Mangelsdorf (1967). All three were distinguished agricultural scientists who, by their own reckoning, had seventy-five man-years of profeSSional experience between them, mostly in land grant colleges of the United States (23). Mangelsdorf, in particular, was known for his pioneering work on hybrid corn, which, he had once argued, prevented the spread of communism by ensuring that postwar Western Europe was well fed (Kloppenburg 1988:5). The anomaly is that the association between the story of hybrid corn in the United States and the green revolution in the developing world is seldom made explicit. In fact, the term "green revolution" is, as far as I am aware, never applied to refer to the hybrid corn story and was reserved exclUSively for Third World contexts. 42 Stakman, Bradfield, and Mangelsdorf, for example, emphaSize the importance of "the contributions of science, technology, and education to the phenomenal progress of agriculture in the United States during the quarter of a century prior to 1941" (1967:23), but they fail to mention any of the dislocating social effects of these changes. These include the displacement of millions of the farm population;43 the growing influence of large corporate interests in agriculture; questions of sustainability raised by the indiscriminate employment of energy-intensive inputs and chemicals; the growth of regional specialization; the enormous increase in the concentration of land and, even more, of output; and the reduction of Agrarian Populism 53

family farmers ("peasants on tractors") to what is in effect a putting-out system in the giant machinery of capital, plowing a narrow furrow between corporate suppliers of manufactured inputs, on one side, and corporate purchasers of output, mostly intermediate goods, on the other (Busch and Lacy 1983; Kloppenburg 1988).44 (This is the phenomenon that Marx [1976:1:1019-38] called "the formal subsumption oflabor to capital.") However one evaluates the merits of the United States' green revolution-and I recognize that there are a number of sharply divergent positions on this issue-it is baffling that an entire range of consequences appeared invisible to those who pioneered the use of similar techniques in the Third World. 45 To understand how that could have happened, we need to focus on a series of convergences in those discourses of development explicitly employed by agricultural scientists and those discourses implicit in their actions. The first thread is provided by the complete normalization of the u.s. experience, so that it functions as a model that is absent from deliberation yet instrumental in shaping the strategy to be followed in the Third World. This much is evident from the description of the achievements of science and technology in "the phenomenal progress" of u.s. agriculture provided by Stakman, Bradfield, and Mangelsdorf, in which the geographic extension of crops to colder areas, genetic improvements, yield increases, effectiveness of insecticides, and productivity of industrial dairy and livestock farming are listed to the exclusion of any other consequence (1967:23-24).46 What is not mentioned anywhere is that since the Morrill Act of 1862, which established the land grant university system, and the Hatch Act of 1887, which established State Agricultural Experiment Stations, agricultural research in the United States was heavily weighted to the largest farmers, to commodity-specific research, and to the search for yield-enhancing varieties that encouraged the heavy use of biochemical inputs supplied by industry. This is entirely consistent with Busch and Lacy's (1983:35) observation that the primacy of increased productivity was not questioned from the mid-1930s to the 1960s.41 An idealized model of how agricultural research had functioned in the United States thus implicitly shaped the ends to be pursued in the developing world. Such a productivist emphasis was reinforced by an unabashedly Malthusian view of the Third World. The entire argument for increasing yields was framed by the specter of increasing population. 48 The narrative relies on the motif of a race, which pits food production against population: In lane 1, the Western scientist, putting his imagination and 54

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dedication to work in inhospitable conditions; in lane 2, the dark challenger, threatening to undo all the Progress being made by Development. The outcome of the "race" is always uncertain. It is not until the narrative reaches an electrifying climax that the outcome is announced. Almost any text from the period could be chosen to illustrate this point. Campaigns against Hunger (Stakman, Bradfield, and Mangelsdorf 1967) makes the case admirably. After detailing the rapid rise of the Mexican population in the decade of the 1930S, the authors conclude, "Mexico needed more food; how could she get it?" (1967:2; emphasis added).49 Later they announce that "wheat production has won the race with human reproduction .... The present population is about 170 percent of what it was in 1943, but wheat production is at least 350 percent of what it was then" (72-73). They set aside the importance ofland reform by noting its inadequacy: "Land redistribution was satisfying the hunger of the landless for land, but was it satisfying their hunger for food?" (1). Several consequences follow from such a stark scenario. The first is an entirely self-serving one, in that it bestows enormous moral and political legitimacy to narrowly defined, technocratic work that, more often than not, disempowers and depoliticizes the poor and leads to increased inequality. No matter what the outcome, one can always spot the angel of progress in this narrative, just as one can locate in the "population bomb" the diabolical, racialized enemy, to whom the thermonuclear anxieties of the cold war had been transferred. 50 After all, who could argue with the lofty goal of eradicating hunger? The death knell of this justification was sounded, perhaps more decisively than ever, by Amartya Sen's elegant treatise on hunger (1981), which drove an ineluctable wedge between the unthinking association of increasing food availability and the eradication or reduction of hunger. Although Sen is careful to delimit his argument to famines, the implications of his position can easily be extended to increases in food production. Stated baldly, Sen's argument leads to the conclusion that whatever other positive effects may result from greater food availability, it is by no means certain that one of them will be a reduction in the number of the hungry or the depth of their poverty. 51 Another consequence of casting the problem in Malthusian terms is that population appears to be an independent and external variable, with its own inexorable logic, unconnected to the distributional and welfare consequences of the techniques and methods of production. The metaphor of a race between production and population puts them into separate and unconnected tracks, the logic being that if one did Agrarian Populism

55

nothing about production, population would simply zoom away and "win" the race. This leaves no option but to join the "race" and "beat" population by increasing production at all costs. And the fastest way to increase production is to approach it in a top-down and technocratic manner: involving ordinary people-farmers and landless laborers, both men and women-would take too long, and the results would be too uncertain. Thus, the commission appointed by the Rockefeller Foundation to chart a direction for Mexican agriculture concluded that the fastest progress would be made by a top-down approach (Stakman, Bradfield, and Mangelsdorf 1967:33). Commission members were not simple-minded, recognizing that education and extension were vital ingredients in a successful strategy. They concluded, however, that research should come first, for without a "great reservoir of potentially useful but unused information" (34), extension would have no scientific knowledge to bring to the farmers. The appeal of such a strategy lay in the assumption that scientific work inherently results in the greater social good. Scientists often make such an argument for basic research on the grounds that the "results" of such research are inherently unpredictable; however, this is too transparent a fiction for those who, like agricultural scientists, do "applied" research, a fact recognized even by scientists themselves. Employing their experience in the u.s. research system, agricultural scientists proceeded to replicate their endeavors with the morally charged mandate of eradicating hunger and "winning the race" against population. 52 To the normalization of the u.s. experience and Malthusianism was added a third potent ingredient: nationalism. The development of agriculture was conceived entirely in national terms; indeed, the nation constituted the horizon within which all problems were posed and solutions offered. For example, the race between population and food production was conceptualized as occurring within each nation and not on a global scale. Thus, growth in national population was pitted against growth in nationally produced food, not taking into account the existence of phenomena such as migration and the world market, which might have profoundly altered food availability and the numbers of people who had to be fed. The ultimate aim of green revolution policies "was to help Mexico toward independence in agricultural production, in agricultural science, and in agricultural education" (Stakman, Bradfield, and Mangelsdorf 1967:33). Similarly, in these discourses, hunger was a problem that afflicted nations rather than particular groups of dispossessed people. Thus, for example, we have statements like the 56

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following: "There was hunger in Mexico in 1941. That 'the country has many of the aspects of an overpopulated land' was evident to all who looked below the surface" (31). Notwithstanding theories of comparative advantage, which would have implied specialization in agricultural production to take advantage of natural endowments, the goal of national self-sufficiency in food grains was always paramount in green revolution agriculture. 53 This clearly had to do with the implicit model of agricultural development being employed, namely, that of the United States, rather than with explicit theories of economic development. (It is significant in this regard that no economists were included in the Rockefeller Foundation teams that went first to Mexico and later to India.) Mimicry and allochronism were inherently contained in the language of "scientific progress," but so was nationalism. 54 All these themes are jointly articulated in metaphors of the life cycle of the subject and its familial interpellation. Stakman, Bradfield, and Mangelsdorf provide a wealth of examples that demonstrate this all too clearly: In 1941, agriculture was traditional; now it is progressive. And it will continue to progress because it is continually becoming more scientific. . . . Research and education are growing together. . . . Mexico has reached its majority. ... In 1943 Mexico was national in scientific outlook; the exigencies of the time demanded it. Now she is both national and international in outlook. . . . Mexico has shown many retarded countries a road to progress if they have the will to follow it. ... Mexico is indeed rapidly approaching the upper echelons in the world's family of nations. As President Lopez Mateos said in speaking to the Mexican Union of Associations of Engineers, "We are no longer an underdeveloped country, but a nation in course of full development, which requires the professional competence and human qualities of all its sons." (196T9, 15, 16, 19, 178; emphases added) When teleological premises are embedded in the life narrative of the nation-as-subject, can the patriarchal family be far behind? The "family of nations" reconstituted an orderly and hierarchical world community in the aftermath of decolonization, in which the young, the "retarded," the "underdeveloped," and those who had not yet reached their "majority" were to grow, with the help of scientific knowledge, until they reached the "upper echelons" of the family and became adults through the realization of the full potential of their sons. This is by no means an Agrarian Populism 57

extraordinary document; in fact, it is precisely the ordinariness of these phrases, the unselfconscious manner in which they are deployed, that makes it clear that these associations have been neither incidental nor extraneous to discourses of development in the postwar era. 55 Between 1952 and 1955, several teams of Rockefeller Foundation experts visited India to assess the situation of agriculture with a view toward replicating the Mexican success story. The "problem with Indian agriculture" was, once again, theorized in terms of food production keeping up with population growth. 56 Proof that population had outpaced food supply was found in the fact that "during the past 400 years the country has suffered 45 famines .... In the Bengal famine of 1943, between one and three million people died" (Stakman, Bradfield, and Mangelsdorf 1967:238). The use of the Bengal famine to make the authors' point is highly ironic, because it has been confirmed subsequently by a good deal of scholarly analysis that if the Bengal famine demonstrated anything, it was that great human misery could exist despite above-normal years of food production. 57 In April 1956, the Rockefeller Foundation entered an agreement with the Indian government to "cooperate in the improvement of maize, sorghum, and millet production and in the development of a modern postgraduate school of agriculture at the Indian Agricultural Research Institute at New Delhi" (241). The big breakthroughs occurred not in these crops, however, but in wheat, in which a breeding program began in the early sixties at approximately the same time as the continued failure of agricultural policy became evident after the first year of the Third Plan (Frankel 1978:276; Stakman, Bradfield, and Mangelsdorf 1967:235-66). Progress in breeding wheats appropriate to Indian conditions was much more rapid than in Mexico because many of the varieties bred there could be relatively easily adapted in the subcontinent. At the same time that the teams of agricultural scientists were making breakthroughs in breeding new varieties of wheat and maize in India, the newly founded International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) in the Philippines, the second Rockefeller-funded center after the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center, CIM-MYT, was reporting results with high-yielding varieties of rice (Plucknett and Smith 1982:215). Subsequently, two other centers for tropical agriculture were set up in Colombia and Nigeria, jointly funded by the Rockefeller and Ford Foundations, respectively. In 1971, the whole program was institutionalized in a massive way by the formation of the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR), sponsored by 58

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the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAa), the United Nations Development Program (UNDP), and the World Bank. Nine new institutions were set up in quick succession, the most interesting for our purposes being the International Board for Plant Genetic Resources (IBPGR), founded in 1974 for the purpose of promoting "the conservation of crop diversity by sponsoring an international network of germplasm collections," and the International Service for National Agricultural Research (ISNAR), founded in 1979 "to help strengthen national agricultural programs so that research results benefit the inhabitants of developing countries" CPlucknett and Smith 1982:215, 216). There is not a little irony in the founding of an international agency whose goal is to strengthen national agricultural programs. An ideology of national selfsufficiency continued to lead the Rockefeller Foundation's programs. Improving agricultural methods, developing national scientists and institutions, disseminating the results of research nationally and internationally, and "helping each country toward independence in the various phases of agricultural improvement" were the foundation's guiding principles (Stakman, Bradfield, and Mangelsdorf 1967:3°5; emphasis added). On the other hand, germ plasm collections are important because they were to become a key to the debates regarding ecological imperialism. One of the arguments in this vein is presented by Jack Kloppenburg (1988:15):58 "The creation of the Green Revolution research centers (e.g., the International Rice Research Institute, the International Center for the Improvement of Maize and Wheat) was the product not only of an effort to introduce capitalism into the countryside but also of the need to collect systematically the exotic germplasm required by the breeding programs of the developed nations." Once in place, germ plasm banks are available to universities, national research programs, and private companies (Plucknett and Smith 1982:217). It is precisely this issue-that is, the access enjoyed by multinational seed corporations to germ plasm banks-that has drawn the most controversy in recent years. 59

Conjunctures: The Indian Food Crisis and the Origins of Populism

The "development regime" that has informed the character of Indian agriculture in the postindependence period has been shaped most of all by considerations of sovereignty and redistribution. Questions of sovereignty loomed large in the emphasis given to rapid, state-sponsored Agrarian Populism 59

industrialization. But it was a crisis in the agricultural sector that truly challenged the sovereignty of the nation-state. By the middle of the Third Plan, it became progressively evident that increases in agricultural output were not occurring and certainly would not even approach the rapid increases hoped for by the planners. At the same time, Nehru's death brought to power a new prime minister, Lal Bahadur Shastri, who was far more favorably inclined to the agricultural sector. The new agriculture minister, C. Subramaniam, was in favor of a policy based on price incentives, biochemical agriculture, and "betting on the strong"-that is, cultivators already favorably positioned in terms of land and water resources. Beginning with the 1965-66 season, when two hundred metric tons of wheat were imported from Mexico and planted on a thousand plots, the demand for HYV seeds went through the roof. Total grain output rose rapidly, from 72.3 million tons in 196566 (a drought year) to 108-4 million tons in 1970-71, with increases in wheat output, which more than doubled from 1965-66 to 1971-72, leading the way (Frankel 1978:510; Plucknett and Smith 1982:216; Varshney 1989). In implementing this strategy, foreign exchange was a crucial bottleneck; in that regard, aid from the World Bank and the U.S. government was absolutely critical (Varshney 1989:314). The success of green revolution policies depended on the conjuncture of a number of different events. The monsoons failed for two consecutive years, in 1965-66 and in 1966-67, sharply bringing down the total output of food grains. This, in turn, led to Significant increases in food imports, which rose steadily from 3.1 million tons of wheat in 195657 to a peak of 10 million tons in 1965-66. Although imports from the United States never reached more than 15 percent of domestic output, the public distribution system became almost entirely dependent on PL 480 wheat. President Johnson further complicated the political situation by putting wheat supplies on a "short tether." India was required to submit its food needs every month, and the president himself cleared the shipment of food aid, depending on India's "progress" in implementing "reforms" in agricultural and fiscal policy. Ashutosh Varshney's (1989) careful research has demonstrated that the Indian government was already moving in the direction of Johnson's "reforms," so that pressure from the United States did not alter the direction of agricultural policy. After the war with Pakistan in October 1965, food aid was suspended until Indira Gandhi made the politically fraught decision of devaluing the currency in June 1966. The manner in which Johnson treated Indian leaders and policymakers was to hasten the drive to food 60

Postcolonial Developments

self-sufficiency to no small extent. Finally, there was the significant factor that institutions where agricultural scientists could breed hybrid seeds and where these seeds could be duplicated and commercially produced had been operating for almost a decade by that time. In addition to the postgraduate program, set up with Rockefeller help, at Pusa, New Delhi, at least two other universities, one at Pantnagar in Uttar Pradesh (up) (started with the assistance of the University of Illinois and the United States Agency for International Development [USAID I) and the Punjab Agricultural University (set up in Ludhiana with the help of Ohio State University), were involved in training, seed production, and agricultural extension. Questions of sovereignty always loomed large in the promotion of the green revolution. The agriculture minister, Subramaniam, criticized the strategy of institutional reforms pursued by the Nehru government as "mere slogan shouting" and argued for a more "pragmatic" approach, stressing that the choice faced was the following: "Would you like to have ... high production and attain self-sufficiency within the country . . . or would you prefer to continue dependence upon foreign imports indefinitely?" (Subramaniam 1979:28).60 Nationalism was a vital ingredient in the discourse of development pursued by the postcolonial state. Those who disagreed over whether industry or agriculture should be given top priority in development plans were expressing differences about the quickest path to self-sufficiency and sovereignty. However large the differences in approach, the goal of a powerful, sovereign nation was widely shared. The perception of Indian leaders and policymakers that Johnson had humiliated them only strengthened their desire to see rapid increases in food output, so that the nation would no longer be dependent on food aid. National food self-sufficiency was also the explicit goal of green revolution agricultural science, although Malthusianism, rather than anticolonialism, was the chief motivating factor there. When the monsoons failed for two successive years, agricultural output, which had increased at a steady rate until then, mostly owing to bringing new areas into cultivation, fell precipitously.61 Obtaining aid in an international food regime dominated by the dumping of U.S. surpluses would have meant acquiescing to American pressure to change agricultural policy, curb population growth, and depreciate the currency (Frankel 1978:246-92).62 It was in this context that the Indian government hit on the policy of promoting the green revolution, the highyielding varieties (HYVS) of hybrid seed. But because it concentrated on Agrarian Populism

61

areas already well endowed with water resources and low person-to-Iand ratios, the green revolution further exacerbated interregional inequalities. It also increased inequalities within regions because larger farmers were better positioned to take advantage of the new technology.63 The next chapter demonstrates how the spur given to agrarian capitalism loosened the densely interlinked ties between landowners and landless laborers in the countryside. Together, the rise of a class of surplusproducing farmers, growing inequalities between and within regions, and the relaxation of ties of patronage created the structural conditions favorable for populist appeals to succeed. Thus, any consideration of the rise of "peasant movements," led largely by and in the interest of the better-off sectors of the agrarian population, has to take into account the powers of accumulation unleashed by the green revolution. 64 By now, analyses of parties, interest group politics, and the intent of government poliCies and their implementation are topics that have been well traversed in the study of Indian agriculture. I will concentrate, therefore, on an extended analysis of discourses, ideologies, and actions pertaining to the green revolution by focusing not merely on what was done but also on what it meant, both to the leaders and, more important, to the people who were the objects and subjects of their discourse. How did these pronouncements and poliCies find their way into the everyday lives of village people? What did these discourses and programs mean to them? How were they interpreted? It is for this reason that, in the next section, I will concentrate on the phenomenon of populism. Populism is the form in which discourses of "development" and hence of modernity infiltrated the crevices of daily life in rural northern India. While many analysts have pointed to the phenomenon, few have analyzed it in any detail. Under what circumstances was it deployed? What difference did it make? Why was it successful? What kinds of resistance did it enable? What were its silences, exclusions, and erasures? How do we understand populism theoretically? Redistributive politiCS and populism: "Garlbi Hatao" and the Indira Congress

Most scholars of Indian politics agree that the 1971 national elections signified a change in the style and content of political mobilization in a direction often termed "populist." For example, in her influential book, Francine Frankel attributes the two-thirds majority obtained by Indira Gandhi's party to a political gamble that employed the language of class 62

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through the promise of radical, but democratic, economic reform. She stresses that the campaign capitalized on Indira Gandhi's image as a leader committed to economic and social reform (1978:454-55). Similarly, Lloyd Rudolph and Susanne Hoeber Rudolph argue that the unexpected success of her party owed mostly to Indira Gandhi's "comparative advantage as India's only national political personality" and the decision to match her personality to one simple and appealing slogan, "Remove poverty" [Garibi hataol (198Tl35). The strategy of incorporating the popular classes by appealing to distributive goals and social justice has been seen as the distinctive feature of populist politics. Therefore, a consideration of "populism" may help us shed some light on the peculiar ideological formation forged by Indira Gandhi in the wake of the demise of traditional Congress politics, which was based on distributing favors to supporters in the classic pattern of pyramidal machine politics. Populism may have signified a change in the style and content of political mobilization, but what did such a change imply for the development of the nation-state? The significance of Indira Gandhi's populism, I wish to argue, lay in that it represented a quantum leap in the dissemination of discourses of development. This resulted not only from better use of the mass media but also from finding new audiences who were receptive to populist messages. Populist politics altered both the content of development and the degree to which development discourses entered the everyday life of the rural poor.

Populism and "Underdevelopment." Before going on to examine how populism has functioned in the Indian context to shape the experience of modernity for people in rural areas, I will briefly dwell on theories of populism. The study of populism has taken Latin America as the exemplary case. Among the larger countries, the thirties and forties witnessed the phenomena of Peronism in Argentina, Varguism in Brazil, and Cardenism in Mexico (Collier 1987; Davis 1992; Torre 1992:388; Laclau 1977; Adelman 1994).65 Populist politics arose in a period when largescale urbanization and import-substituting industrialization accompanied mass mobilization. 66 Apart from making connections to urbanism and to a particular phase of economic "development," theories of populism usually imply that "the masses" are manipulated by charismatic leaders, that populist coalitions typically consist of vertical, multiclass alliances, that redistributive policies and programs are central, and that populist rhetAgrarian Populism

63

oric aims not at linking lower classes to a unified ruling class through democratic processes but at creating an antagonistic ideological field in which "the people" are pitted against "the oligarchy" or, put more generally, against historically privileged social groups (Torre 1992:386; Laclau 1977).67 Populism, therefore, is the name given to a singular sociopolitical formation, a particular type of hegemonic bloc, which can be distinctively identified. An enumeration of its characteristics, however, is not sufficient to tell us why and under what circumstances it arises. Explanations of populism arising from modernization theory offered an understanding of distinctiveness in terms of the failure of Latin American politics to replicate the European experience. Ironically, although modernization theorists in Latin America quite effectively described an experience of modernity that differed strikingly from an archetypical (and largely mythical) European one, their explanation for this difference was circumscribed by a teleological view of history. Thus, Germani (1978) and Di Tella (1965), in different ways, attribute the rise of populism to a lack of synchronicity between economic, social, and political development. The "demonstration effect" of Western consumption practices translates into a "revolution of rising expectations" that the slowly developing economy is unable to satisfy. There develops a chasm between rapidly growing social and political demands and the slow pace of economic development. Demographic expansion; infrastructural incapacity; dependence on foreign capital, technology, and markets; and fiscally irresponsible redistribution: these further underline the gap that separates rising political demands from economic resources (Di Tella 1965:49). Unable to bridge this gap through channels of incorporation that, in the "Western" experience, integrated workers gradually, the phenomenon of populism arises in response to what modernization theorists have called "the crisis of governability." Populism is a device to suture recently mobilized groups, often newly urbanized working classes and lumpenproletariat, to elite projects of importsubstituting industrialization and nationalism. It becomes, therefore, a practice of constructing hegemonic blocs that is, by definition, restricted to the Third World. According to this perspective, economic development would automatically restore "normal" politics-that is, a politics of incorporation in which the demands of the subaltern would not exceed the capabilities of the economic system. In other words, economic development would restore the synchronicity that had been lost because modem technologies of communication had prematurely raised the expecta64

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tions of the Third World's poor. By definition, populism was a phenomenon that characterized "transitional" societies and exemplified the uneasy and unstable balance between modernization and tradition. In the teleological narrative of modernization theory, the eventual arrival of Third World peoples into consumer heaven was never in doubt: the concern was that the process not be disrupted by the uneven pace of change in different functional domains. In acknowledging that the "demonstration effects" of consumerism on poor economies was potentially dysfunctional, modernization theorists openly acknowledged that the experience of modernity in the Third World could not possibly mimic the mythic narrative of European development because "intellectuals of eighteenth- or nineteenth-century Europe or the United States ... did not have the opportunity to imitate more advanced nations" (Di Tella 1965:48). However, unlike the dependistas, who insisted that asynchronous development was a structural feature of capitalism and not an accident that had befallen poor countries, modernization theory maintained its steadfast faith in the Enlightenment narrative of progress. Modernity was its telos, and mimicry its method. The influential work of Ernesto Laclau (1977) stands in sharp contrast to the explanation of populism offered by modernization theory. Laclau argues that populism is connected not as much to a determinate stage of development as to a crisis "of the dominant ideological discourse which is in tum part of a more general social crisis." In such a crisis, a fraction within the dominant bloc seeks to impose its hegemony through a direct appeal to the masses. Although all populist discourses have in common the feature that they speak in the name of "the people," not all discourses that speak for "the people" are populist (Laclau 1977:172-75). In particular, there is a difference between dominant blocs that consolidate their hegemony by incorporating "the people" as an order of difference and populist blocs that incorporate them as an antithetical force. In the former, "the people" form part of a stratified, multiclass alliance that seeks to diffuse or dislocate the tensions between the different structural locations represented in the alliance. Laclau puts it very well when he writes (197TI61), "A class is hegemonic not so much to the extent that it is able to impose a uniform conception of the world on the rest of society, but to the extent that it can articulate different visions of the world in such a way that their potential antagonism is neutralized." Examples of such political coalitions are the Congress Party before the 1969 split and the Institutional Revolutionary Party (Partido Revolucionario Institucional, or PRI) in Mexico. Agrarian Populism 65

Populist coalitions, by contrast, depend on Manichaean discourses that divide society into antagonistic fields: the people versus the oligarchy, Bharat (one of the "traditional" Hindu names for India) versus India. One pole is authentic, good, moral, just, true, responsible; the other is inauthentic, foreign, evil, unjust, immoral, false, and irresponsible. Such a discourse leaves no room for compromise or dialogue because exclusion is its founding principle (Torre 1992:399-406). It is a polarizing discourse that seeks not to attenuate or soften the hard edges of conflict between classes, races, ethnic groups, linguistic communities, and religious groups but to build on these conflicts by defining a common enemy. Contained within the (usually) disparaging references to populism as a political phenomena is the recognition that such a discourse of opposition, wielded in the name of large majorities (especially historically underprivileged majorities), unleashes, or has the potential to unleash, powerful social forces. The suggestion of danger thus always lurks around discussions of populism, the danger that leaders who stoke destructive, mass anger may be unable to control it. This has sometimes been the way in which that exemplar of populist politics, Peronism, has been understood. 68 Populism as a Direct Link with "the Masses." In this section, I will first

attempt to delineate in what respects Indira Gandhi's campaign of 1971 represented a shift toward populism. My goal is to understand whether and how Indira Gandhi managed to create a populist coalition. 69 The reason why this is important is that in the shift to populism, "development" and, by extension, poverty were the central terms of reference. Indira Gandhi's populist poliCies also mark an important change in the discourses and programs of "development." I then go on to assess how the pronouncements of political leaders were being received by those who were the objects of that discourse. The standard narrative of Indira Gandhi's tilt toward populism begins with the crisis in the country in the late sixties and with the bitter infighting within the Congress. 70 The 1967 elections saw the Congress poll less votes (41 percent) and less seats (55 percent) for the lower house of Parliament (Lok Sabha) than ever before. On the national level, the food crisis of 1966-67, precipitated by two disastrous monsoons, a war with Pakistan, and an unsuccessful devaluation, had steadily undermined the Congress's position (Rudolph and Rudolph 198P33). Polling data analysis suggested that young and low-income groups were deserting the Congress. 71 Moreover, the Congress per66

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formed even worse at the state level, losing a majority in eight important states. Regional parties emerged as an important force and had, in common, the strategy of employing populist rhetoric to attract electoral support (Frankel 1978:385). After the debacle at the polls in 1967, the Congress decided that it needed to improve implementation of the "socialist" policies for which the party had long stood. A growing struggle between the wellestablished leaders of the party, on the one side, and the prime minister and young radicals in the party, on the other, culminated in the resignation of Morarji Desai as deputy prime minister. In the immediate aftermath of Desai's resignation, onJuly 21,1969, the government announced that it had nationalized the largest fourteen banks in India by presidential decree. This proved to be an unexpectedly popular step as it identified Indira Gandhi with a new direction in economic policy. Indira Gandhi abandoned the old Congress principle of accommodation and mediation. By late November 1969, the Congress had divided into two: Congress (0) for Organization, popularly known as "Old Congress," and Congress (R) for Requisition, popularly known as Indira Congress. One side consisted of the traditional leaders of the party, men who had risen from their primary political base in various states to politics at the center. On the other side stood Indira Gandhi, a few veteran leaders, and a large contingent of younger, more radical politicians.72 Three months later, Indira Gandhi dissolved Parliament and called for fresh elections, a year before they were normally scheduled to occur. This "delinked" the elections for Parliament from the elections to state legislatures, thereby separating national issues from regional ones for the first time. Most of the lower-level organization of the old Congress Party had gone to the Congress (0), since it was those leaders who had institutionalized bases of support at the grass roots. Therefore, not many seasoned observers forecast that Indira Gandhi's Congress would obtain a majority in the new Parliament (Frankel 1978:452; Rudolph and Rudolph 198n35). Indira Gandhi went on an unprecedented, forty-one-day campaign tour, addressing over 250 large rallies and many small ones (Frankel 1978:454). She underlined the impression that she was conducting a personal struggle on behalf of the poor against entrenched interests. Her campaign emphasized that whereas her opponents were interested mainly in her removal, she had no interest other than the removal of poverty. 73 Rather than rely on state party bosses to deliver the vote, as Agrarian Populism 67

the Congress historically did, she went over their heads to make a direct appeal to "the people." The appeal succeeded beyond anyone's imagination. Her party swept to power with 350 seats in the 518-member Lok Sabha, more than the two-thirds required for amending the constitution. The old Congress bosses were routed, obtaining only sixteen seats in Parliament (Frankel 1978:455). Indira Gandhi's populist, personalist, and plebiscitary politics had won the battle (Rudolph and Rudolph 198T132-40). The (Indira) Congress Working Committee observed the dawn of a "new historic situation which brought into the national mainstream vast masses of the weaker sections of society" (Frankel 1978:459).74 Why did the old Congress machine fail to deliver the votes this time? What were the implications of this fact for the emergence of a different model of peasant politics, one not so strongly dependent on existing rural elites but on the emerging, upwardly mobile middle castes? With a clear popular mandate and a two-thirds majority in Parliament, Indira Gandhi moved to amend the constitutional guarantees of property as a fundamental right as a prelude to the removal of privy purses in December 1971. In the same month, a war with Pakistan resulted in its partition and the establishment of the new nation-state of Bangladesh. 75 Even more so than the general elections, the state vote highlighted the complete breakdown of clientistic politics as the leaders and representatives at the state level historically consisted of rural elites. Frankel (1978:478) takes the results as demonstrating that "the awakening of large numbers of the rural poor to a desire for the implementation of new principles of equality and participation had taken political form." Rudolph and Rudolph (1987:137), however, see it mainly as evidence of the success of "plebiscitary politics" rather than class-based mobilization. Victory at the polls did little to transform the Indira Congress into a party that was institutionally capable of effectively implementing its promises to help the poor (Kohli 1987).16 It would be a mistake to infer from this, however, that the populist promises made by Indira Gandhi were just cynical postures intended to deliver the vote. If one looks at specific policy measures, many new programs were started in this period. In the next chapter, I argue that it is not enough to judge these programs as "failures" according to standard criteria of "program management." Such an evaluation does not do justice to the remarkable political effects of these purportedly "failed" programs. Frankel (1978:491) points out that instead of embarking on a strategy that would achieve the objective of growth with redistribution, 68

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the government essentially decoupled the two goals, pursuing standard policies of providing incentives for industrial growth, on the one hand, and thinly disguised welfare programs whose main goal was redistribution, on the other. Populist programs, therefore, signaled a shift in the dominant conception of "development," which had been defined largely in terms of canalizing savings for productive investments into primary goods and infrastructure. Not only did populism give welfare programs legitimacy in a model of development, it made them politically essential. As early asJuly 1970, a few months before the elections, Indira Gandhi extended the pilot program for the Small Farmers Development Agency (SFDA) to almost twice the number of districts and approved an additional forty projects for the agency for Marginal Farmers and Agricultural Laborers (MFAL). Soon after the elections, a Crash Scheme for Rural Employment (CSRE) was inaugurated in April 1971 to generate employment for one thousand people in each district in the country. In December 1971, just before the state elections, a Drought-Prone Areas Programme (DPAP) was started in seventy-four districts. The net effect of these programs on rural poverty was probably not significant. Frankers assessment of these schemes puts the emphasis in the right place: "On the whole, the central sector SFDA/MFAL projects could not be distinguished from social welfare programs that temporarily-for the duration of the subsidy scheme-increased the consumption of impoverished participants, but could not create additional opportunities for productive employment to raise their income permanently" (1978:499). In the next couple of years, at least some of these welfare schemes had found their way to small farmers and landless laborers. 77 From the discussion so far, certain themes that link populism with the reformulation of development goals and priorities emerge with particular clarity. The Congress was historically a dominant bloc in which the "masses" had been incorporated within an order of difference. In other words, the needs and aspirations of lower castes and classes were acknowledged within an overarching framework of compromise, such that "their potential antagonism was neutralized." Indira Gandhi introduced a "conflict idiom" that explicitly rejected compromise with those who disagreed with her policies and ideology. Enacting measures like the nationalization of banks and the abolishment of privy purses signaled her determination to fight for the poor against the urban rich. Similarly, her vow to abolish poverty Signaled an end to the class compromise implicit in the machine politics of the old Congress, which was Agrarian Populism 69

dominated by locally powerful upper castes and classes. In its emphasis on exclusion, the incorporation of "the poor" as an antithetical force, its Manichaean characterizations of certain fractions of the former ruling classes and urban moneyed interests, and its personalistic and messianic self-portrait, Indira Gandhi's discourse had all the features usually attributed to populism. Unlike populist movements, however, the Indira Congress made no effort to institutionalize its ideology in organizations within the party, except by way of introducing new programs whose primary orientation was toward social welfare. However, whereas other scholars have seen this failure to build institutions as proof that Indira Gandhi used populist slogans merely to forge a winning electoral coalition in the short run, I think it is more useful to think of it as shaping the kind of development regime that was eventually put into place. The redistributive programs that were implemented as part of her populist platform, such as the Small Farmers Development Agency and the Drought-Prone Areas Programme, were, despite their small size, to have profound and unforeseen consequences for social relations at the grass roots. As will soon become evident, the transformations of social relations brought about by populist programs were linked to the appropriation and redeployment of development discourses by farmers groups led, in tum, by well-to-do owner-cultivators. Contemporary observers, journalists as well as scholars, interpreted Indira Gandhi's move toward populism in the 1971 elections as a stroke of genius, thereby further embellishing her image of political astuteness. Most accounts emphasized struggles within the realm of high politics to explain why a switch to such a strategy became a matter of political survival. Left without the organizational base of the Old Congress, Indira Gandhi, aided by the intensive use of mass media in the form of posters, film slides, radio news, and so forth, made direct appeals to rural voters. The unexpected enthusiasm with which the news about bank nationalization had been received seemed to indicate that the support of the "popular classes" had not already been "captured" by the policies and organizations of existing parties. Development discourse, which had hitherto been mainly an elite preoccupation, revealed a surprising potential for radical democratic mobilization. Populism unleashed a specifically postcolonial appropriation of development in which the "premature" incorporation of "the masses" threatened to derail the engine of progress on its route to modernity. The analysis offered so far of the extension of development discourse in a populist direction leaves an important question unanswered. AI70

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though it accounts for the actions of a specific leader, Indira Gandhi, it does not shed much light on why populist appeals succeeded. In other words, if we are to understand what makes populist appeals successful and what they mean to "the people" who are being appealed to in these discourses of development, we have to go beyond the realm of elite politics and policy statements. The next section is devoted to what "Indira Raj" meant to the subaltern in a north Indian village. Understanding Populism through "Reception Theory" and Beyond. The statements and actions of a charismatic leader explain what kinds of appeals were made and how they were articulated and put into practice. What remains to be understood is how they were interpreted and employed by those who were the objects of this discourse. A "reception theory" approach emphasizes the structural location of particular groups as an explanation for why they are predisposed to receive populist appeals favorably. Although such an approach is useful, one has to go beyond an invocation of subject positions to ethnographically investigate the particular conjunctures to understand the favorable reception of populist discourses. If populism is, by definition, based on the recognition or creation of antagonistic fields, then it certainly left its mark on the life of villagers in Alipur. It mobilized lower-caste (and usually lower-class) people against those landowning groups that exercised control over them and had "delivered" their votes to the Congress in previous elections. The residents of Alipur, especially lower-caste people, routinely pointed to Indira Gandhi's reign as introducing very significant changes in social relations at the grass roots. Their anger was directed, most of all, at the thakurs, who were traditionally the landlords [zamindarsl of Alipur. Shortly after I reached Alipur in 1984-85, Indira Gandhi was assassinated and, thus, was even more readily a topic of conversation. When I talked to groups of lowercaste men, they would often criticize the thakurs but rarely did so to their face. During my last research trip in 1991-92, although the younger generation was considerably less inhibited, this was still largely true of the older generation. Many lower-caste people told me that their lives improved considerably during the tenure of Indira Gandhi. During a windswept and overcast monsoon afternoon toward the end of July 1992, I was sitting outside the cattleshed owned by four jatav brothers and their families. 78 Two of the older generation were there, along with an assortment of their sons, grandsons, and neighbors. One

Agrarian Populism 71

Monsoon clouds

of the brothers, Chotu, put it this way: "Most of all [the thakurs'] power has been slashed since the raj of Indira-Indira hung them up to dry [sab taang deeayl, got rid of untouchability, abolished unpaid labor, increased the wages of laborers, and introduced subsidies for the Scheduled Castes in all programs." Attributing this impressive list of accomplishments to Indira Gandhi struck me as implausible. Nevertheless, it was significant that laws abolishing untouchability and unpaid labor, long on the books, as well as the introduction of subsidies for lower castes and higher wages for laborers, were being credited to her. What was it about Indira Raj that made it appear the source of these changes? In response to this question, Chotu answered: "[The administration] kept writing reports. If there was tension in the village, there was a greater chance of it being heard [by the authorities]. The news started appearing in the newspapers and on the radio [as if to say] : 'Don't harass laborers; give them a proper wage; don't persecute them; eradicate untouchability; work together.''' That the administration would, in an unprecedented step, sometimes intervene on behalf of the lower castes was borne out by the experience of some harijans in the village. In one instance, facing threats from a powerful landlord, the harijans complained to the district administration. Following orders from above to investigate and promptly and actively respond to complaints filed by 72

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Scheduled Caste people, the district administration sent a contingent of policemen who camped out near the harijan houses. They stayed long enough to ensure that the thakur got the message that he could not intimidate the harijans except at his own peril. This incident caused waves in the whole area and indicated how far things had changed for all concerned. Its value lay less in the immediate goal of protecting the harijan households than in the fact that it symbolized a drastic change in the regime's commitment to laws that had long been on the books but rarely enforced. Apart from concrete changes in administration, the government also employed the radio to symbolize a change in its willingness to enforce the law. As Chotu pointed out, the mass media was used to convey the message, "Don't harass laborers; give them a proper wage; don't persecute them; eradicate untouchability; work together." "But the same laws were in effect before Indira Gandhi," I reminded him. "Haven't these been the stated policies of the Congress ever since independence 1" The answer was that such may have been so, but before Indira, the effect of these statements was minimal. During Indira's raj, everything was done satisfactorily. I was then provided with the following example: "Earlier, [the thakurs1 used to command people to do unpaid labor [begaar1. We had to go and work there even while our own fields were neglected. If we didn't go, they insulted us. Now, they do the same thing but it doesn't work. Now the society is literate. Everyone knows the law. Just as they read what is in the newspapers, so do our children. So now everyone knows everything, and [we know] there's no such thing [as begaar 1. We may help them voluntarily, but it is no longer a question of compulsion and threat." Many different lower-caste men related similar stories when they recounted how things had changed within their own lifetimeJ9 It was a measure of the success of Indira Gandhi's populist pronouncements and policies that such an astonishing degree of credit for that change was attributed to her. Whereas social justice was previously seen as an ancillary to development, it was identified as a central component of the project of national development in Indira Gandhi's populism. On the other side were the statements of the upper castes, which inverted the evaluations of the lower-caste men. I was frequently told that the country had gone downhill ever since the Scheduled Castes had been inducted into the bureaucracy.so Often, discussions of corruption among upper-caste men would conclude that the problem took root Agrarian Populism

73

when large numbers of lower-caste officers were inducted into the administrative services. An upper-caste informant blamed the government for changing a system of orderly hierarchy that "even the Muslim kings and the English did not disturb," thereby increasing corruption. He emphasized the point with a couplet, "Bringing untouchables into the state/Is to increase corruption by spates" [Shaasan main shudron ko laanaa/Hain bhrashtaachaar ko badhaanal. Another upper-caste (thakur) informant, who attributed the origins of government policies on behalf of Scheduled Castes to the preoccupations of Mahatma Gandhi, went on to argue that Indira Gandhi's death was directly tied to her promotion of the lower castes. He claimed that her assassins, Beant Singh and Satwant Singh, were hired by the government because they were Scheduled Caste and Backward Caste, respectively.81 Just as Beant Singh and Satwant Singh had turned out to be untrustworthy, he implied that other lower-caste people would bite the government's hand in return for what it was doing for them. Particularly among the thakurs, there was an unmistakable tone of bitterness toward policies perceived to be responsible for the erosion of their power. And, once again, the person held most responsible for this was Indira Gandhi. Yet if Indira Gandhi was the first national leader to seize upon populist politics as a means to consolidate power, there soon developed oppositional movements that sought to do the same thing. In the decade after Indira Gandhi first introduced "Garibi hatao," the most important social movements in India were led by well-to-do farmers, articulating the interests of the countryside against the cities (see T. Brass ed. 1994). Whereas Indira Gandhi's populism mounted an attack on the failure of "national development" to reach the poor, the farmers movement would target the failure of development to reach the countryside and, in particular, farmers, who were thus represented as an unitary category.

Peasant Movements and Agrarian Populism

Struggles over the meaning and direction of development exhibited in populist politics demonstrate the degree to which "development" was the outcome of strategic political choices, and not a technocratic solution to national problems of poverty and sovereignty. Indira Gandhi attempted to consolidate a hegemonic bloc by incorporating the poor into a regime of development based on policies of import-substituting industrialization and state control over the economy. These efforts, however, did not go without challenge. In rural areas, particularly in the 74

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surplus-producing states of Punjab, Haryana, and western UP, this challenge came in the form of farmers' efforts to construct a counterhegemonic bloc that employed populist discourses of development. This was manifest in various farmers movements that identified the chief contradiction as that between Bharat and India, the country and the city. Populism was, thus, not just a project of the ruling regime but also deployed by oppositional groups to construct alternatives to the ruling coalition. As we shall see, it is oppositional populism, rather than the appeals to the poor initiated by Indira Gandhi, that have gathered strength since the early seventies. There are two parts in this section. In the first I chronicle the rise of "peasant" politics by concentrating on the ideological and intellectual direction given to it by its chief proponent, Chaudhary Charan Singh. I explore Charan Singh's actions and pronouncements in some detail to explain the events that led to the dominance in "peasant" politics of substantial owner-cultivators belonging to the middle castes. Significantly, Charan Singh articulated a critique of dominant models of development and even managed to found a political party based on that critique. It was not until after his death, however, that the ideological ground that he had helped prepare could be utilized successfully to mobilize a coalition of rural groups. The success of antigovernmental populism depended not only on the wealth created by the green revolution but also on the legitimacy provided to a conflictual reconfiguration of the nation by Indira Gandhi's attack on regnant models of development. The second part picks up the story in the late eighties, when the BKU became a major presence in northern India. It demonstrates how the Kisan Union effectively marshaled a populist position that focused attention on the "urban bias" of development policies. The elements of this populist discourse are the positing of a sharp and irrevocable divide between rural Bharat and urban India, which, in turn, is built on a critique of the strategy and implementation of "development." But this construction of a unitary "Bharat" is strafed with the tensions that pervade rural northern India and is built on powerful exclusions based on the intersection of gender domination with caste and class rule. Oppositional populism: the BKD and its descendants

The first organized political party to articulate a rural critique of development and represent itself exclusively as a party of peasants [kisans 1 was the Bharatiya Kranti Dal, or BKD, founded by Chaudhary Charan Singh in 1967 (Brass 1993; Byres 1988:145; Duncan 1988AO).B2 Charan Agrarian Populism 75

Singh, a veteran Congress leader, left the Congress Party shortly after the elections of 1967, bringing down the government in the state of Uttar Pradesh. Long a champion of the interests of the landowning peasantry, Charan Singh's personal ambition, as well as his advocacy of "peasant" causes, was consistently foiled by opposing interest groups within the UP Congress. In the elections of 1969, the BKD emerged within just two years as the largest opposition party in the UP legislature, with more than a fifth of the popular vote. Its support was particularly strong in the western part of the state, where it polled over one-third of the votes (Duncan 1988:40-41; Brass 1980:411-12; 1993).83 Charan Singh's credentials as a "peasant leader" were forged through a lifetime of political work and intellectual production that consistently articulated the viewpoint of the landowning peasantry.84 It would be no exaggeration to say that he, more than anyone else, was responsible for laying the ground for the later emergence of "peasant" politics. As early as 1937, he introduced the Agricultural Produce Markets Bill to protect the direct producer from "the rapacity of the trader" (Byres 1988:148).85 His crowning achievement, however, was to sound the death knell of the large, especially absentee, landlord by steering the UP Zamindari Abolition Act of 1952 through the legislature. More than anything else, the Zamindari Abolition Act signaled the Congress's willingness to oppose the large landlords, who had dominated village life, in favor of the class of small landlords and well-to-do occupancy tenants who provided the party with the backbone of its support in the rural areas. 56 Although the act did little in the way of providing land to the landless, it did transfer small but significant amounts of property from noncultivating owners to hereditary tenants. These were the groups that would later form the main basis of the BKD, traditionally agricultural middle or "backward" castes like the Jats, Ahirs, Kurmis, Yadavs, and Gujars (Duncan 1988:44). The Zamindari Abolition Act was consistent with Charan Singh's conviction that agriculture had a central role to play in the development of the nation and that agricultural growth depended on providing incentives to the actual cultivator and protecting him from usurious landlords and traders.87 As UP minister for revenue and agriculture in 1953, Charan Singh seized the opportunity offered by a strike of village land record keepers [patwaris], who were considered an impediment to dispossessing large landowners, to dismiss thousands of them. 88 He also engineered the UP Consolidation of Holdings Act of 1953, which enabled the consolidation of hopelessly fragmented landholdings into a single farm for each fam76

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ily.89 Land consolidation was a precondition to such capital-intensive investments in agriculture as the sinking of tube wells. 90 Finally, during the food crisis of 1967, he reluctantly enforced the Government of India's food procurement scheme, but he did so in such a way that it paid producers a price for their output that was comparable with what they might have been able to obtain on the market. 91 The transfer of land to owner-cultivators, the consolidation of holdings, decreases in the land revenue in real terms, and support prices were the preconditions that enabled the adoption of green revolution technology by rich and middle peasants. As I shall presently contend, the "package" of policies introduced with the high-yielding varieties enabled this segment of the peasantry to "take off" as a potent political force. However, the elements for the consolidation of what is sometimes disparagingly referred to as a "kulak" populism were already in place. Charan Singh was its chief ideologue and architect. He consistently argued that his actions were on behalf of all members of the "farming community." Although it was abundantly clear that his policies would disproportionately benefit the rich peasantry, his discourse steadfastly refused to acknowledge any such differentiation (Byres 1988). The populist elements in Charan Singh's polities arose out of a careful delineation of the forces "opposed" to "the farming community." These forces included landlords, patwaris, traders, and moneylenders, all of whom managed to extract, through a variety of morally or legally dubious means, the surplus that legitimately belonged to the farmer. There is no doubt that his positions against these groups found resonance among a broad spectrum of the rural population, including the rural poor. Charan Singh strongly opposed the reorganization of agriculture along industrial lines through, for example, the extensive use of wage labor and the development of large mechanized farms (Byres 1988:17576).92 He also opposed collectivization, by which he meant the establishment of farming cooperatives based on the Soviet model, with large farms collectively worked by a commune. Against both these models, he used arguments about the greater productivity of small holdings (the famous "inverse" relationship between farm size and yield per unit of land) and the failure of tractorization to increase productivity. Capitalism and collectivization, with their presumption of state control, were represented as furthering urban interests against all the rural people (Byres 1988:179). Charan Singh thus implicitly articulated the sectoral interests of agriculture through a series of oppositions to others who were seen as advancing (urban-based) industrial or state interests. Agrarian Populism

77

Hence he forged a discourse that represented an urban and industrial model of national development as inimical to the interests of the vast majority of the population that lived in rural India. 93 The BKD'S success in gathering more than a fifth of the popular vote in UP in its very first election in 1969, the highest of any non-Congress Party since independence was gained, signaled the emergence of a major new political bloc rooted in agrarian interests. The next elections in 1974 made it clear that the BKD'S initial success was not a flash in the pan. Once again, the BKD polled more than a fifth of the popular vote, despite strenuous electoral efforts by Indira Gandhi and the central leadership of the Congress (Brass 1980:415-16). The BKD merged with the Janata Party in the historic winning coalition of 1977, the first nonCongress government to rule the country, but then split off from the Janata Party and contested the 1980 elections as the Lok Dal, once again gathering almost 30 percent of the popular vote. 94 When the BKD was founded in 1967, the technological revolution known as the green revolution was yet to be widely promulgated in western Uttar Pradesh. The strata of the peasantry that owned between 2.5 and 27.5 acres ofland, the backbone of the BKD, were also those most favorably positioned to employ the new technology. Because the capital investment required to sink a tube well, essential for a steady and reliable source of irrigation, was quite large, those who had land to offer as collateral had less difficulty in obtaining loans. On the other hand, a tube well became a profitable investment only because holdings had been consolidated: the more land that could be reliably irrigated with one well, the less its fixed cost per unit of output. The aggregate output of wheat jumped because of the new technology, and food grain production quickly reached levels which ensured that the shortfall of 1966-67 would never be repeated. 95 For the better-off peasants, the new technology was a great boon. The "package" of policies introduced by the government included not only price guarantees for output, thus ensuring that great increases in output would not result in price depression, but also subsidies for inputs such as chemical fertilizers. At the same time that this new technology enabled rich farmers to obtain larger net surpluses, it also made them more dependent on government policies and programs. Suddenly, the support price announced before the growing season was not merely the concern of an elite stationed in Delhi but of the entire class of farmers with marketable surpluses. Changes in the support price, as compared with input prices, in effect indexed the terms of trade for the agricul78

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tural sector. If the support price rose faster than the cost of inputs, it resulted in a distribution of income in favor of agriculture. If it rose more slowly, it amounted to a de facto tax. Thus, not just farm incomes but also intersectoral distribution effects came to hinge on the level of support prices. It is in this context of the development of different sectors of the economy that we have to understand the growing organizational ability and militancy of "peasant" groups. That the better-off segments of the rural population were a powerful political presence96 becomes clear from an incident surrounding discussions in the Planning Commission to tax agricultural incomes as a means to raise government intakes, which was unequivocally rejected by the prime minister. 97 Charan Singh himself employed the growing power of the peasant lobby to great effect in struggles within theJanata coalition after it came to power in 1977. 98 Forced to resign from his post as minister of home affairs in 1978, Charan Singh sought to demonstrate his popular support by organizing an enormous rally of "peasants." On his seventy-sixth birthday on December 23, 1978, a farmers rally was held in New Delhi, which was attended by an estimated one million farmers, mostly from neighboring states, in what was perhaps the largest such gathering in the history of the capital. The speeches at the rally portrayed India's villages as the "colonies" of its cities. In its aftermath, Charan Singh was hastily reinducted into the cabinet, as minister of finance and deputy prime minister. 99 In the budget that he presented to Parliament shortly thereafter, a budget that an associate described as possessing "the breath of the people and the smell of the soil," he cut the duty on chemical fertilizers by half, reduced taxes on agricultural equipment, and increased government expenditure on rural electrification and dairy farms (Byres 1988:163). Peasant politics and developmentallsm

Shortly after Charan Singh passed away in 1987, several people, including his son, Ajit Singh, staked their claim to the party that he had helped found and had raised to such prominence. Fights over who would inherit the Lok Dallegacy led to a split within the party. But it was not in the realm of parliamentary maneuvering that "peasant" politics in northern India was to find its resurgence. That came with the founding of the Bharatiya Kisan Union, or BKU, a nonparty organization led by Mahendra Singh Tikait, a rural jat leader from the prosperous cane- and wheat-growing district of Muzaffarnagar in western Uttar Pradesh. 100 At Agrarian Populism

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the same time that the Kisan Union (as the BKU is often called) was gathering strength in UP, very similar movements based in the rich peasantry were making their presence felt in other states. The most important of these in the last few years have been the Shetkari Sangathana led by Sharad Joshi in Maharashtra and the Karnataka Rajya Ryota Sangha led by Dr. Nanjundaswamy.101 In 1989 a meeting to convene a unified national peasant association drew thirty farmer organizations from twelve different states. 102 All these organizations relied heavily on the stratum of owner-cultivators with substantial holdings for their core support, a fact reflected in their consistent demand to raise output prices and reduce the cost of inputs. Of the various features of Charan Singh's "peasant" discourse, the one most emphasized by successor movements points to the dual nature of the country's development. The leader of the influential farmers movement in Maharashtra, SharadJoshi, very clearly articulated the division between "Bharat" and "India." Perhaps taking a cue from dual-economy models, he argued that rural Bharat and urban India were two different countries. 103 The intent was to contrast the vernacular name denoting the ordinary, the rural, the little tradition, the "real" country of small peasants and agricultural laborers, with the Western, urban, industrial, internationally oriented, modern nation-state. This division was intended to highlight the "urban bias" of development policies that have resulted in a widening gap between urban dwellers who work for the state and industrial sectors and rural folk who work in the agricultural sector. This duality between Bharat and India, as we shall see, managed to coalesce a variety of dissatisfactions experienced by different classes and segments of the rural population into a unitary framework. In its ability to map different grievances into a singular antithesis, it functioned as a truly powerful oppositional populism. It was oppositional in that its chief target was the government, which it accused of failing to deliver on its developmental promises. Peasant populism insisted that the interests of "India" systematically undermined the well-being of "Bharat" (see especially T. Brass ed. 1994, 1994b). Implicit in the division between Bharat and India was a more wideranging critique of the model of a modern nation being pursued by successive postcolonial regimes. The envious disdain for "India" shown by the proponents of "Bharat" often included an explicit critique of the lifestyles of the denationalized, decultured, urban elite who sought to mimic "the West." The implication, by extension, was that a plan for national development built on the mimicry of the West was guaranteed 80

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to fail, since it would adversely affect the rural population. The agrarian populism espoused by peasant groups, therefore, attempted a farreaching critique of development models, one that quite consciously sought to build a "modern" nation that was not a pale imitation of "the West." I now take a closer look at peasant populism and its relation to the actions of the Kisan Union at the ground level. My sources for this analysis are interviews with the residents of the village in western UP where I did fieldwork and reports in vernacular newspapers in the area.

Bharat versus India. The contrast between Bharat and India finds one powerful axis in the critique of "urban bias," in pitting the countryside against the city. Under the leadership of the Kisan Union, this critique has been expressed in many ways and sometimes leads to overt violence between villagers and urban groups. One such incident occurred in the small town of Khair in Aligarh District in June 1989. Although the reports state that there was no organized Kisan Union leadership in the district, the conflict involved people who claimed to be members of the BKU. According to the account given by the chairman of the town municipality, there was a legal dispute between the township and the owner of a shop in the main market. Just ,as the owner of the shop and the municipality were about to reach a compromise, some Kisan Union activists approached the owner and offered to settle the matter to his monetary advantage. When he agreed, they demolished the shop at night and attempted to carry off the debris. This prompted the police to intervene and arrest five BKU activists. A confrontation then arose between the Kisan Union and the police in which six activists were killed. Because this incident occurred just a few months before the national elections of December 1989, it was at once seized upon by leaders of the opposition, who made it a "pilgrimage" site. 104 This incident occurred after several months of tension between the administration and union activists. Farmers stopped paying taxes whenever anyone of them was punished for failing to pay back loans or taxes, "rescued" arrested Kisan Union volunteers from police custody, closed government wheat purchase centers if they considered the purchase price to be too low, stripped and "arrested" a police inspector for eight hours, and held another district official captive for twelve hours. But what is most interesting, from my perspective, is how the death of the Kisan Union activists was construed as a "confrontation between the farmers and 'the rest' of the population." The president of the town's chamber of commerce stated: "BKU volunteers in the surrounding vilAgrarian Populism

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lages are ready to confront anyone belonging to Khair town. Today this campaign is directed against the urban population of Khair, tomorrow this is going to spread all over western Uttar Pradesh."los Of course, market towns were especially offensive to peasant activists because they housed merchants, long considered people who used their guile and knowledge of the market to shortchange farmers. Ranbir, a jat "middle farmer" living in Alipur, was an enthusiastic supporter of the Kisan Union. In a conversation that took place in late July 1989, he talked of the importance of obtaining a good support price for wheat from the government. He felt that by uniting, farmers could have a say in fixing the selling price of their produce. He contrasted such a situation favorably with the prevalent context in which merchants fixed prices. "If you take your wheat to the market," he told me, "one trader will negotiate the price with another while you sit on a side. Then, he will come to you and say, 'I've managed to get you a good price, but it wasn't easy.'" Ranbir felt that the farmer was powerless in the entire negotiation. Suresh, a brahmin who owned a small plot of about two acres, gave me a similar reason for why farmers were opposed to merchants. Like others in Alipur, Suresh was not an active supporter of the Kisan Union. In fact, unlike Ranbir, he was not even inclined to view the Kisan Union favorably. Nevertheless, he admitted that the organization was doing much good work. He explained that the conflict with merchants arose from the question of who should benefit from the proceeds of farming. The Kisan Union merely maintained that the merchants were reaping "unnecessary" profits, and wanted to ensure that proceeds from the sale of farm commodities went into the hands of farmers themselves and not of middlemen. The merchants of the nearby town, he added, had tried to split the Kisan Union in their region by creating divisions between leaders within the organization. The ploy backfired, however, and the union had now organized against the merchants as well as the state. Not everyone shared the perception held by Suresh and Ranbir regarding the efficacy of the Kisan Union. A group of thakur men in Alipur told me that the Kisan Union could not face up to the government. They said that hundreds had been killed in the firing at Khair, even though official reports and news bulletins claimed that only six had died: the police took all the bodies and dumped them somewhere; they had never been found. The Kisan Union was no match for the government. The thakurs, long the dominant landlords and political

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force in Alipur, had been hostile to the Kisan Union because they saw it as an expression of jat assertion. The presence of merchants was not the sole reason for the peasants' wrath against urban centers. Other resentments harbored by peasants focused on the better infrastructure available in cities. The vast differences in educational and medical facilities, as well as the unavailability of electricity, telephones, and tap water outside the city, were often commented upon. For example, in a meeting called by the Kisan Union in the town of Danpur in Bulandshahr District, several speakers seized on this theme of the disparities between their lives and those of urban residents. The chair of the district unit, Gangaprasad, blamed the government for corruption in the schools. He said it was not just the teachers who were responsible but the poor condition of schools in the villages. This despite the fact that the farmer was the "true owner" of this country. Gangaprasad added: "A farmer who spends his day weeding is as intelligent as the Chief Minister. He is not a fool. Our village children should receive exactly the same education as that available to the children of ministers and industrialists in Delhi. We cannot tolerate this stepdaughterly treatment."106 An Op-Ed piece in another vernacular newspaper, the Bijnor Times, advanced a similar complaint: "As far as the question of opening the gates of education, health, civic amenities, and knowledge, and of the ability to take advantage of these, the farmer is at a disadvantage."lo7 There were also grievances that centered on the supply of electricity and the government's perceived enthusiasm for debt collection. Gangaprasad went on to say, "We want to tell the government that the villages should be supplied electricity twenty-four hours a day, just as Delhi is." He highlighted the inequalities in the government's loan collection policies: "Rich and famous people owe the government millions of rupees but we have never seen them go to jail for it. But if the farmer owes a little bit, he is promptly hauled off to jail."lOB This statement has to be understood in the context of the Kisan Union's long-standing demand that the farmers' debts should be "forgiven" or written off, a position also adopted by almost all other farmers organizations. For example, Sharad Joshi led karjmukti (liberation from debt) agitations to do the same in Maharashtra. Since a disproportionate amount of loans were made to those farmers who had some land as collateral, the class implications of these agitations are clear. Another major argument that fed into the "urban bias" thesis was that

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the terms of trade were set against agriculture. In fact, a central demand of the farmers organizations was that agricultural prices be restored to pre-green revolution levels. Peasant leaders demanded that the price of agricultural output relative to inputs be restored to 1967 levels. l09 This also tied into the perception that the discrepancy between those working in the industrial and government sectors and those in agriculture had actually widened. It was pointed out, for example, that government outlays for mining and industry were 50 percent greater than for farming and irrigation in the first six five-year plans. 110 The same article indicated that the gap in income per worker between nonagricultural and agricultural sectors had widened from a ratio of 1.5 in 1951 to approximately 3 in 1983. In other words, instead of a decrease in the inequality of workers' incomes between sectors, there had been an increase in the thirty years following the First Plan. Yet it was not just in critiques of "urban bias" that the dualistic view of and identification with "Bharat," as against "India," found expression. Apart from expressing a range of grievances, these discourses also created a particular kind of subject position, one whose moral bearings were quite different from those found in "India." This was the virtue of those who were poor, politically helpless, exploited, but who, on gaining power, refuse to exploit it. The implicit contrast was with the high-handedness, arrogance, and corruption of the powerful, both government officials (a favorite target) and the urban bourgeoisie. 111 Poverty-and the lack of political power-was a constant theme in the discourse of Tikait, the leader of the Kisan Union. When asked about the role that the Kisan Union would play in the elections in 1989, he replied: "What can the farmer do to change electoral fortunes? Look at them-they are so poor, they can only listen when we speak, no more. We have no power." 112 It is as if the poverty of the farmers, iconicized by their clothes ("look at them-they are so poor"), is also what renders them mute-unable to represent their interests or desires ("they can only listen"). Their appearance, therefore, represents both their poverty and the lack of a political voice. But then there is a subtle transference from the poverty that renders the peasantry mute to its leader ("they can only listen when we speak. . . . We have no power"). By a series of transpositions, the iconicized poverty of the peasants becomes a generalized signifier of peasant powerlessness. The employment of sartorial signifiers was absolutely crucial to everyday life in Alipur. The enterprising son of the wealthiest household in the village deliberately wore tom clothes as he went about his work. 84

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When, in the course of conversations with others, he was accused of being "greedy," he loudly pointed out that ifhe was indeed as wealthy as they claimed, why did he continue to wear the kind of clothes that no self-respecting person, who could afford better, would want to? Those village men who had obtained jobs in the city signified their status by wearing trousers and a shirt rather than the pajama-kurta or dhoti worn in the village. Clothes made the man a villager or a city slicker. What a person wore signified not merely how wealthy he was but where he belonged as well. Clothes thus possessed great representational efficacy, and it was this that Tikait deployed in his discourse. ll3 Those who lived in the village and continued to think of themselves as farmers therefore went to great trouble not to stand out in the way they dressed. 1l4 In fact, they went to considerable lengths not to incur the envy of their neighbors. One of the most dynamiC men in the village was Naresh. Although he worked full-time as a government employee on a farm run by the state and was, therefore, quite well paid by local standards, he had, in addition, rented some farmland as a sharecropper. He devoted most of his time and energy to his farming but somehow also managed to fulfill the sometimes strenuous obligations of his formal job. He told me that he deposited his government income and most of the money he obtained from sharecropping in a bank as quickly as possible. He did not keep any utensils or objects in the house that would make his wealth visible. In fact, he preferred to stay in debt for nominal amounts so that people would continue to regard him as poor. "That is the only way not to arouse jealousy in this place," he said. Therefore, when Tikait pointed to his followers, saying "look at them," he was pointing to a highly charged signifier whose encoding was probably interpreted quite differently by a casual observer such as an urban reporter than by someone more intimately familiar with village life in western Uttar Pradesh. The poverty and helplessness of the "farmer" was connected to the effort to recuperate his self-respect [swaabhimaanl. ll5 Through its activities of mass protest and noncompliance with government regulations, the Kisan Union was attempting to "reawaken the pride of the peasant." In another incident between Kisan Union activists and the police over the kidnapping of a young Muslim woman, Naiyma, the police had reportedly pushed three tractors belonging to peasant activists into a canal near the town of Bhopa in Muzaffarnagar District. Tikait reached the scene by the side of the canal shortly thereafter and, along with thousands of farmers who joined him, proceeded to lay camp for Agrarian Populism 85

the "recovery of Naiyma." Pointing to the submerged tractors periodically burping oil to the surface, Tikait announced dramatically, "See, there lies the self-respect of the kisan-immersed in that canal."1l6 The self-respect of the peasants was identified with the tractors, whereas the ostensible reason for the gathering was to address the kidnapping of Naiyma. Taking up the cause of an unknown Muslim woman may have had the strategic intent of consolidating the Kisan Union's position as an organization of farmers that crossed religious lines. But it was also related to dominant discourses about male honor being tied to the successful control of female sexuality. It was widely rumored that Naiyma's "abductor" was the relative of a powerful minister in the UP cabinet. Hence, the Kisan Union was protesting the inability of male peasants to "protect" their women against representatives of the state. Naiyma became the means to mobilize people, but her misfortune was displaced by the sunken tractors, which were obviously more potent icons of the "self-respect" of (male) peasants. ll7 Tikait demanded that the chief minister of UP or the prime minister come to Bhopa to see the peasant's fate "with his own eyes." He said that farmers could not really expect justice from these higher officials. But, he wanted them to "come and see what their minions had done to the peasant's selfrespect."1l8 Tikait repeatedly emphasized the powerlessness of the peasantry and their suffering at the hands of urban rulers. He told the gathered farmers that the city-based government [sarhaarl would never provide real justice for the farmer. 1l9 After the body of the abducted Naiyma was found, Tikait vowed that the struggle for the farmer's selfrespect would continue. He claimed that because the government was dishonest, theirs would be a protracted struggle, but one in which he was confident they would eventually triumph. 120 Urban commentators noted how these themes of poverty and helplessness, along with the perception of injured pride, lent a "moral" character to the evocation of "Bharat" struggling against an all-powerful "lndia."121 The legal system was itself seen as complicit in this project of domination. Thus, Tikait rejected a priori the government's efforts at adjudication by saying, "No dispute can ever be resolved satisfactorily by legality; it can be settled only through a search for the truth [sachchaai] ."122 One commentator, Chandan Mitra, wrote that, unlike a trade union leader whose success would be judged by "materialistic" criteria of winning a majority of a charter of demands, Tikait's success depended on his ability to invoke and reinscribe a "rural" moral code. Thus, an evaluation of the agitations led by Tikait would be incorrectly 86

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interpreted in a straightforward means-end calculus. Drawing from the Kisan Union's rhetoric and from modernization theory to invert Marx, Mitra concluded: "A modernizing state can ignore this kind of rural backlash only at its own peril. But before it devises a strategy to combat the resurgent peasant, it needs to understand the peasant mind, dispassionately, but not without empathy. Analysts of 'India' have so far tried to change 'Bharat.' The point, right now, is to interpret it."123 The analytic force of such statements depended on their reliance of "the peasantry" as a singular category: "the resurgent peasant," "the peasant mind," "a rural moral code," "rural backlash," and so on. This is indeed exactly what the Kisan Union attempted to do in its depiction of "Bharat." The emphasis on the poverty and helplessness of the peasant and the mistreatment of "Bharat" at the hands of "India" formed the ground on which the Kisan Union made its appeals for peasant unity. This point was forcefully emphasized to me by Ranbir, the jat farmer introduced earlier, who was a sympathizer of the Kisan Union. He said that the union of bus conductors and the union of traders could stop work when they wanted to, but farmers did not have that luxury. For that reason, the government did not do much to help the peasants. If the Kisan Union was successful, he claimed, it would become so strong that it would overturn the government. The Kisan Union had created a sense of togetherness among peasants, and unity was the only way in which peasants could gain some power. If you desired to get something done on your own, he inquired, how likely were you to be successful? But if you were part of a professors union that had fifty local members, then those fifty people would stand behind you to ensure your success. That was exactly what the Kisan Union was doing. In the vocabulary of villagers, "getting your work done" invariably referred to matters pertaining to government departments. Members of the Kisan Union pointed out that they were careful not to abuse the strength gained through collective action and that this was how peasants differed from government officials. For example, when the Naiyma agitation was almost at its end, the government sent a crane to Bhopa to fish out the sunken tractors from their watery graves. Because removal of the tractors would have deprived them of the most powerful symbol of the administration's contempt for the peasantry, however, Kisan Union activists surrounded the crane and prevented it from taking out the tractors. Speaking at the end of the campaign near the Bhopa canal, Tikait talked about how the Kisan Union had brought Agrarian Populism 87

the administration to its knees. Although they had stopped the administration from doing what it pleased, Tikait emphasized that the Kisan Union did not wish to be arrogant about its own strength. He thereby underlined one big difference between the collective strength of peasants and the bureaucratic power of the state. Once again, the demonstrable difference between "Bharat" and "India" was made apparent. The Failure of "Development." Development has served as the cornerstone of the legitimation efforts of the postindependence Indian state. The success of Indira Gandhi's populism lay precisely in its attack on the failure of the previous regime's development efforts to go far enough in improving the lives of those in whose name they were being launched, namely, the poor. But she did not put into place an effective mechanism by which to implement new populist policies explicitly targeted at the poor. Therefore, it was only a matter of time before oppositional groups would take up the battle cry of the "failure of development" to attack her regime. And this is precisely what the Kisan Union did in the late eighties. Although much of the Kisan Union's rhetoric was aimed at protecting the interest of peasants and consolidating them into a unitary force, in practice this most often translated into attacks on the state for its failure to implement development policies properly. A large proportion of the Kisan Union's local-level organizing was around issues of corruption and the failure of the government to implement rural development programs to the benefit of farmers. However, members of the Kisan Union sometimes articulated a broader critique of those development strategies which put industry first and which deliberately keep agriculture backward. Although both critiques built on the modernist premises of the discourse of "development," they had quite different implications for how those premises became lived realities. Different formulations of development, thus, speak of alternative modernities and do not just index non-Western modernities. Notions of "alternative modernities" indicate that modernity is a contested field of possibilities whose shape and form is inherently unpredictable. This helps us qualify the theoretical discussion that often posits "modernity" in the singular, as if it were a unitary phenomenon. In my conversations with peasants in Alipur, it became evident that the appeal of the Kisan Union at the local level owed much to its stand against corruption and government mismanagement. Although no one from Alipur actively participated in its rallies, many were extremely

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sympathetic to the union. For example, Suresh, the brahmin farmer described above, told me that the main achievement of the Kisan Union had been to oppose government officials. He said that when officers of the Electricity Board "needlessly" harassed farmers by threatening to cut off their electric connections for nonpayment of dues, the Kisan Union intervened effectively to prevent that from happening. He felt that the "main purpose" of the Kisan Union had been the elimination of bribery. N aresh, the government employee we met earlier who maintained a second job as a sharecropper and deliberately stayed in debt so as to give the impression of being poor, felt that the main purpose of the Kisan Union was to fight injustice. As a jat, he was particularly supportive of the Kisan Union and felt that its message of farmers uniting to act in their common interest made a great deal of sense. He appreciated the fact that the Kisan Union did not interfere in village life and did not affiliate itself with any political party. 'They swing into action only when some injustice has been done," he claimed. When Ranbir, a more prosperous jat farmer, told me why he supported the Kisan Union, he too pointed to its ability to fight corruption among government officials: "If I go to officials of the Electricity Board, they won't listen to me. They will ask me to give them Rs 100 or even Rs 200 to get my work done. Even after I pay them, they won't do the work. I will have to run after them for a few days, go there at the very least a couple of times, before anything will be done. With the union, why will I go alone? We will all go in strength, forty or fifty of us, then the electricity officials will automatically do our work." He recounted how soon after a Kisan Union rally had encouraged farmers not to pay their electric dues and land taxes, electricity officials had come to a neighboring village and attempted to cut off some connections. Someone got wind of the officials' actions and informed Kisan Union activists. They rushed with a large group to the spot where the connections had been cut, caught the officials, forced them to reconnect the lines, took them back to the village, and locked them up for good measure! Ranbir pointed out that if one went to districts where the Kisan Union was really strong, such as Muzaffarnagar or Meerut, one would see that the villages there enjoyed an uninterrupted supply of electricity. No government official dared touch the connections in those areas. For their part, government officials did not like to work in Mandi, the district where Alipur was located. Kishan Chand, an official who had recently been transferred from another district, told me that Mandi was an "undesirable post" because of peasant activism. He claimed that they

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got their way by employing the tactics of hooligans [gundagardil. No government official would willingly place himself in a position where he would be subjected to such "hooliganism." Yet corruption, conceptualized as a failure of the government's ability to implement its policies, was not the only source of dissatisfaction with "development." Explicit criticisms of the model of development followed by successive regimes in independent India expressed doubt about the value of concentrating on industrialization. The following critique appeared in a local vernacular newspaper: The question remains why the condition of the peasant is what it is despite 38 years of planning in which so much of the discussion has focused on the progress of agriculture and the development of villages. Have the benefits of development been unable to reach them? What happened to those resources that were spent in the name of agriculture and farmers? ... [Ilt is evident that the concern for agriculture has been a sham, whereas the truth is that from every viewpoint the farmer has been discriminated against and agriculture has been deliberately kept backward compared with industry and other sectors. There is no need to deny the fact that the price of grain was deliberately kept low right from the beginning so that the urban population and industrial workers could be protected from the burden of expensive food. The results have been predictable: the price of other goods has risen sharply compared with agricultural products. This has meant that farmers' incomes have risen more slowly than [have those inl other sectors. Their dissatisfaction is therefore entirely understandable. 124 "Despite 38 years of planning"-here is a sentence whose parallels are encountered with numbing regularity in conversation and reportage. If one needed an example of how thoroughly teleological and developmentalist discourses were imbricated in everyday life, one need not look beyond such formulations. The expectation of change inherent in such narratives in fact enables the author to formulate his well-articulated critique of the model of development followed in India since independence. The question was not one of implementing existing policies better but of completely changing course because the entire model of development discriminated against the agricultural sector. This critique found tangible expression through demands that the support price of wheat, the chief cash crop in the area, be raised and that subsidies for 90

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fertilizer, water, and electricity be increased. This was seen as a tactic at least to stern, if not reverse, the discriminatory treatment of agriculture. The agitation for higher output prices was, in fact, one of the most successful strategies of the Kisan Union in western UP. When the government fixed the purchase price of wheat at Rs 183 per quintal in 1989, the Kisan Union forced the shutdown of government scales in the area around Alipur.125 The open market price for wheat was actually higher than the price set by the government, about Rs 200 per quintal. The Kisan Union seemed to have set out to violate consciously the government's ban on interstate trading of food grains. They took trolley loads of wheat to the neighboring state of Haryana, where it fetched as much as Rs 250 per quintal. Instead of leaving this to merchants, farmers carried the wheat across the state border themselves and sold it on the other side, earning a handsome profit in the process. The Kisan Union's use of the very discourse of development that had been employed as a legitimizing strategy by the postcolonial state demonstrates that the meanings of hegemonic ideologies are never stable. The ability to rearticulate development into an oppositional discourse that challenges the coherence and stability of the ruling bloc relies on a successful inversion of its claims. Indira Gandhi's populist appeals had already demonstrated that the stable order constructed by the Congress was falling apart. But there was no reason why the same discontent, that had so successfully been nurtured into electoral success, could not be rearticulated to an oppositional ideology. The Kisan Union did this not only by judging the project of development to have failed by its own standards, especially in its effects on the majority of the Indian population living in rural areas, but also by a thoroughgOing critique of the industry-centered model of development itself. It is for this reason that, despite the fact that analysts repeatedly emphasized its "kulak" nature, the Kisan Union was so successful in constructing a genuinely multiclass alliance (but see T. Brass 1994b:252). If, as Antonio Gramsci has argued, the success of a hegemoniC bloc depends on the simultaneous mastery of a whole series of positions on different fronts, then the Kisan Union did manage to cohere a remarkably disparate set of concerns and subject positions. Divisions within Bharat-a Split Subject? Although the Kisan Union was remarkably successful in forging a multiclass, multicaste alliance that simultaneously managed to cross the religious divide between Hindus and Muslims, there were other fault lines in rural society that it was Agrarian Populism

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unable to paper over. In fact, the very source of the Kisan Union's strength-its rootedness in the concerns, ideologies, and idioms of the owner-cultivators of western up-was also its chief limitation. The Kisan Union was unable to work constructively with (potentially competing) farmers movements in other states. Tikait's ability as an "organic" leader to articulate the grievances of the cultivators relied on a discourse that reflects the class, caste, and gender divisions of rural society. Moreover, it was not a strategy that necessarily attempted to encompass all sections of rural society. In this section, I concentrate on some of these divisions, attempting to demonstrate why the Kisan Union succeeded or failed to overcome the fractures that run through the rural areas of western Uttar Pradesh. Understanding the nature of these splits within Bharat may help us understand whether the Kisan Union's critiques of development were aimed at bridging these fissures or at consolidating the dominance of a particular group. Despite its universalizing claims, development had very different consequences for different groups within rural areas. Therefore, which vision of development prevailed was not inconsequential. The politics of caste, class, and gender circumscribed and refracted the ability of the Kisan Union to construct a hegemonic bloc. Perhaps the most remarkable aspect of the Kisan Union's activities was its ability to straddle the divide between Muslims and Hindus. 126 It did so not by denying religious differences but by aggressively emphasizing their solidarity and joint interests. For example, Kisan Union meetings brought together key leaders of the BKU such as Swami Omvesh, the district president of the Bijnor unit, who favored the saffron garb of Hindu holy men, and Ghulam Mohammed, the Muslim district president of the Muzaffarnagar unit. A maulana was invariably present on the dais at public meetings. 127 The slogan consistently employed at Kisan Union rallies daringly combined the religious slogans of Muslims and Hindus. From the dais, someone would shout "Allah-O-Akbar," to which the gathered crowd would respond with "Har Har Mahadev." These slogans were used in all public meetings and in the BKU'S monthly meeting [panchayat] in Sisauli. Ghulam Mohammed, who conducted the monthly meetings, joked about the stereotypes and beliefs of Hindus and Muslims, something that no major political leader would ever dare do in public. 128 Instead of attempting to deny the importance of religion or proclaim its irrelevance for its purposes, the Kisan Union stressed that only by being a good Hindu or a good Muslim could one also be a good human being. 129 92

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To achieve Hindu-Muslim amity, however, one has to go beyond public pronouncements, a fact not lost on the Kisan Union. Apart from ensuring that Muslims occupied leadership positions within the organization, the Kisan Union also played an active role in mediating disputes between groups. Sometimes these disputes spilled over into interclass conflict. In Modh Kurd village in Meerut, there arose a dispute between Muslim jats and harijans when the latter installed a statue of late dalit leader Dr. B. R. Ambedkar in the village square. l3O The houses of Muslim jats faced the square, and they did not want the statue to be placed there. The dispute soon escalated, with the main road being blocked in protest against the installation of the statue, the arrival of senior police officials, and the interference oflocal politicians. When the Kisan Union was asked for help, Ghulam Mohammed was dispatched to mediate the dispute. He called a meeting and decided that the statue would remain in its present place. Despite being a Muslim leader, he ended up ruling in favor of the lower castes. Had this decision been taken by an administration official, it is highly unlikely that the Muslim jats would have consented to abide by it. 131 Not all conflicts between the cultivating classes, who formed the backbone of the BKU, and lower classes were amicably resolved. In fact, there was an irrevocable structural tension between them that often proved unbridgeable. In Chaprauli village in Meerut, the village council [panchayat] dominated by jat farmers attempted to fix the wages of harijan laborers at a rate that was two-thirds to four-fifths of the going market wage. They threatened to punish any farmer who violated the agreement. In addition, they refused to allow laborers who did not consent to work for the lower wages to gather free grass from their fields. In response, the harijans called their own panchayat and announced a list of wage rates for different kinds of work, all of which were higher than the going market wages. They also threatened any laborer violating the agreement with fines and punishments and sent a letter to the prime minister requesting his intervention in having the ban on the cutting of grass lifted. The tension between owner-cultivators and laborers coincided, to a large extent, with the conflict between the "backward" cultivating castes and harijans. The difficulty of containing this conflict can be discerned from the defensive tone adopted by Kisan Union leaders and sympathizers when faced with this question. When asked whether the Kisan Union also represented landless laborers, Tikait attempted to sidestep the question by saying, "There is no mazdoor (laborer) as such. We are Agrarian Populism

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all laborers. Some are big laborers, some are small."132 Similarly, when asked whether his organization represented the interests of all farmers or just the richer ones, he replied: "Who is the rich farmer? There is no rich farmer. This house we're sitting in belongs to a farmer who is considered the third richest in this village of 20,000 people. And yet he doesn't even have 18 acres of land-the ceiling."133 Tikait therefore denied that there were structural antagonisms among the rural population by pointing to their common need to expend family labor in farming activities, to work with their own hands. Owner-cultivators were, by definition, more like landless laborers and marginal farmers by virtue of the fact that they did their own work. I put the same questions to Ranbir when he was telling me about all the wonderful things that the Kisan Union had done. First, Ranbir challenged the suggestion that the Kisan Union may have been pitting agriculturists and nonagriculturists against each other. Ranbir told me that everyone was a farmer these days, "even the merchant [baniya] who owns one hundred bighas [approximately sixteen acres] is a farmer." When land consolidation took place, some land was taken away from each plot and later distributed to the landless, mostly lower-caste, population. "So now even they are farmers. Everyone, therefore, is eligible to join the Kisan Union." If the Kisan Union does not help all farmers, he inquired, how will it forge ahead? But my skepticism was not dimmed. Does it benefit small farmers as much as big ones? I asked. Ranbir replied: "There is no difference between small and large farmers. The small farmer uses water for irrigation; so does the large one. The small farmer puts chemical fertilizer on his fields; so does the bigger farmer. The small farmer has to plow his field; so does the large farmer. The only difference is that the small farmer has a small income and the large farmer a large one. Even if the small farmer does not sell his output, he is still a peasant." Ranbir's point was that all classes of peasants had a common interest in such policies as input subsidies. If irrigation water was cheaper, chemical fertilizer inexpensive and plentiful, and tractors to plow fields readily available, then it would benefit all farmers, not just rich ones. Unlike Tikait, however, Ranbir did not pretend that the Kisan Union supported landless laborers as well. He said that if laborers did not own any land, they had little reason to participate in Kisan Union activities. He pointed to the fact that in a neighboring village, which was dominated by jats, all the village commons (land belonging to the gram panchayat) had been given to schools and colleges instead of the landless. There are seven schools and colleges there, he noted, and they have 94

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managed to take away all the land from redistributive ends ["saari za-

meen khainch lee"). Although Ranbir felt that it was "not surprising" that an organization of farmers had no place for landless laborers, he did not believe that the positions of farmers and landless laborers were necessarily antagonistic. He told me that the government was doing its best to improve the living conditions oflaborers ["sarkaar mazdooron ko upar khainch rahee hain"). Nowadays, he said, if a laborer is offered less than the minimum wage, he refuses to work. Even if he has no other employment opportunity, he would rather sit at home than work for a lower wage.134 Thus, Ranbir implied that the Kisan Union didn't need to look out for wage laborers because they already had the government in their corner. Given the Kisan Union's fervent antigovernmentalism, this was in itself a revealing statement. Ranbir at least acknowledged that laborers needed help to improve their condition. Other supporters of the Kisan Union denied even that. Birendra, a youngjat man from a village whose lands adjoined Alipur, was typical of the younger generation of Kisan Union advocates. He was studying toward an undergraduate degree at the once prestigious college in Mandi, the nearest large ,town in the area. He strenuously argued that agricultural laborers were, in fact, better off than owner-cultivators. "At least the laborer's child is free to go to school," he said, "whereas the farmer needs two hands if he is sowing, two hands if he is preparing [irrigation) ridges in his field or ifhe is dping almost anything else." The farmer's children had to help him because no one else was going to do their farmwork for them. Thus it was that peasant children were deprived of an education. In Birendra's eyes, there could be nothing worse. Of course, such a view completely overlooked the discrepancies in capital and income between what were, in fact, disparate class positions. Birendra inverted the normal hierarchy to paint a picture of peasants as the most exploited class, one occupying the lowest rung of the rural socioeconomic hierarchy. If not true today, he implied, it would be true tomorrow, because the owner-cultivator's condition makes him underinvest in the cultural capital that would guarantee his children a bright future. It was not just the divide between owner-cultivators and agricultural laborers that was fraught with tension. Even within the category of landowning peasants there were differences between large farmers, on one side, and small and medium ones, on the other. Although all peasants with a marketable surplus had a common interest in higher output Agrarian Populism

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prices and all those who farmed benefited from lower prices for inputs, peasants with larger landholdings stood to gain relatively more from the Kisan Union's demands (Hasan and Patnaik 1992). Local officials of the Kisan Union were sensitive to these differentials. For example, the Kisan Union branch in Jatpura, Bulandshahr District, had organized a meeting during which they decided to launch a campaign against dowry. The leader of the branch appealed to Tikait to ban the "demon of dowry." This, he claimed, would prevent the lives of poor and medium peasants from being ruined (Aaj, July 18,1989). This was an acknowledgment that the increasing commercialization of agriculture and the corresponding acceleration in the demand for consumer durables had squeezed poor and middle peasants especially hard. With the availability of an increasing number of gifts that could or had to be purchased as part of a dowry, pressures to spend increased at a faster clip than earnings. Not just differences between richer and poorer segments of the peasantry were at issue, however. The Kisan Union encountered its greatest resistance from other sections of the rich peasantry. This was partly due to the fact that the Kisan Union had a strong base among the jats, the better-off segments of the Backward Castes. The established, landowning, upper castes interpreted the rise of the Kisan Union as a threat. Specifically, they saw it, quite correctly, as a means by which the Backward Castes, such as the jats, were asserting their own power in the countryside. One of the reasons why there was not more overt support for the Kisan Union in Alipur may have been that the thakurs, who were once the landlords of the entire village and continued to be the most powerful political force, were strongly opposed to it. Naresh, the jat employee of the government farm, told me that "the reason that our village does not have a Kisan Union is that the thakurs feel that they will lose control if the Kisan Union is formed. The union says everyone is equal, but the thakurs feel that they are superior." I was given a somewhat different view by an elderly thakur, a former headman of the village and its most eminent (or powerful) elder.135 The man said that Tikait had stopped at his house for breakfast on the way back from a nearby jat village. The thakur felt that, like many other jats, Tikait was an illiterate man, denoting by that term not merely his educational achievements but his manners and refinement. It turned out that his opinion of the Kisan Union leader was so low because Tikait had told him-a thakur-that "the thakurs spend all their money on weddings instead of investing it in farming." The elderly man had responded 96

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by saying that the thakurs didn't have any money to invest in anything because the only people who had money these days seemed to be jats. Another reason why the thakurs were against Tikait was that he had deliberately snubbed the thakur chief minister by not allowing him to address a Kisan Union rally in Muzaffarnagar. "Even if your enemy were to come to your door, you are obliged to ask him to sit down and to offer him something to eat," offered Virendra, one of the more opinionated of Alipur's residents.13 6 It was completely unacceptable for Tikait to have treated a distinguished person in such a rude manner. "This is where he showed his jatness. "137 It is therefore evident that the Kisan Union followed a two-pronged strategy to deal with the multifarious conflicts that afflicted Bharat. The first was to downplay structural contradictions by denying their salience: thus everyone was a laborer, those who used caste were enemies of the nation, there were no rich farmers, and so forth. The other aspect of the union's strategy was to take up different causes that affected various segments of its supporters. The campaigns against corruption, the amelioration of conflict between the Backward Castes and lower castes, and action against "social ills" such as dowry all fell within this category. Despite these efforts, the tensions and conflicts among groups that the Kisan Union wished to unify always threatened to rend the fabric that held the organization together. Oppositional populism such as that promulgated by the Kisan Union, which deployed a Manichaean discourse of "Bharat" against "India," itself constructed a certain kind of location to be occupied by its followers. What united those included in Bharat was not a singular subject position as much as a shared space of opposition. For, although Bharat represented a contradictory unity that allowed the articulation of different interests and positions, it was also built on particular exclusions.

The Place of Patriarchy. I have already dealt with those exclusions having to do with landless laborers, lower castes, and the poor. Now I come to one that was so deeply embedded in the discourses of the Kisan Union that it escaped reflexive commentary altogether. This was the conjugation of discourses of place and patriarchy, self-evidently "rooted" in the ideology of the upwardly mobile Backward Caste groups that formed the backbone of the Kisan Union. In the summer of 1989, Rajiv Gandhi, still prime minister, instituted a policy to reinvigorate village governance [panchayati raj] through new laws and through changes in the manner in which development proAgrarian Populism

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grams were implemented. Instead of relying on those state bureaucracies that had been set up to implement "rural development," he proposed that all the money in a new scheme called the Jawahar Rojgaar Yojana (Jawahar Employment Scheme) be allocated directly to village headman [pradhanl. In this manner, the money intended for villages would not be siphoned off by corrupt officials. When Tikait was asked for his opinion on Rajiv Gandhi's panchayati raj scheme, he replied: "Only a man whose line of succession is clear, who can reel off his paternal grandfather and great grandfather's name without a slip, can suggest panchayati raj. A panchayat is run on patriarchal lines, not matriarchal. Rajiv Gandhi has come to power through his mother-even a harijan whose gotra [subcaste or lineage I line is quite clear is better than such a man .... What right then does the prime minister have to announce panchayati raj?"138 In Tikait's formulation, Rajiv Gandhi lacked legitimacy as a leader because he had "come to power through his mother." Since it was self-evident that legitimate succession could only be through males, Rajiv Gandhi was worse than an untouchable, who at least had a clear line of patriarchal descent. According to Tikait, any person who did not understand this (self-evident) principle was inherently unqualified to talk about, or institute, panchayati raj. Significantly, Tikaifs own power base as the head of the Balian Khap, a panchayat of eighty-four villages in Muzaffarnagar District, was obtained after an intense struggle in which he displaced his own father-in-law. Tikait elaborated these concerns in a letter to Rajiv Gandhi just before Independence Day, August 15, 1989. Traditionally, the prime minister unfurls the national flag from the Red Fort and addresses the nation on that day. Tikait wrote: Those who have no lineage [hot-khot] have no right to fly the national flag. If Rajiv Gandhi does not announce his lineage by August 15, then he too should not touch the national flag .... I do not want to sling mud at anyone. I do not hold any grudge against you [Rajiv Gandhi,] but we must have a record of the lineage [pataal of the country's prime minister. Therefore, Rajiv Gandhi should announce which village he comes from, in which state that village is located, and what the names of his father and grandfather are .... The fact that you do not talk about your father, this must be your mother's fault, not yours .... He who has no lineage should not attempt to besmirch this spiritual nation [rishiyon kay desh ko bigaadnay ki koshish na karay ]. 139 98

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What I have loosely translated as "lineage" also connotes "a sense of place" or "belonging." The lack of rootedness which Rajiv Gandhi exemplified and which, by extension, afflicted others who live in "India" was revealed by his failure to claim descent in terms of a patriarchal lineage. In this discourse, place and patriarchy are completely interchangeable: to have one is to have the other. That is why the shift from "which village he comes from [and] in which state that village is located" to "what the names of his father and grandfather are" is completely transparent. To know your village and to know the name of your grandfather are the same thing. There were several reasons why social and geographic location come together. Almost all marriages in this part of western UP were exogamous. Most married couples also resided virilocally. The system of inheritance was patriarchal and coparcenary: only the son received an equal share in his parents' property. Thus, a daughter was given dowry, married outside the village, and usually moved to her husband's village. A son, by contrast, inherited an equal share of the land along with his brothers, stayed in his father's village, and brought a wife from another place. 140 Therefore, to know your village and to know the names of your male ancestors was to be a man whose antecedents and social position were knowable. Not to know these things was to be rootless, one not fit even to "touch the national flag."141 That this was neither an isolated incident nor one of Tikait's idiosyncratic views is clear from statements made by other "peasant" leaders. Sharad Joshi, addressing the farmers who had gathered to grieve the death of the abducted woman, Naiyma, said: "It is deplorable that even today in our country the poor cannot protect the honor of their wives and daughters. To stop the recurrence of these shameful incidents, we have to fight poverty with renewed vigor." 142 Joshi's discourse combined "developmentalism" with patriarchy. His concern was to rescue the manly virtue that "protects the honor of women," rather than with the more direct issue of patriarchal violence against women themselves. He linked the failure of the fight against poverty with the failure of poor men to protect their women. Thus, his concern was with poor men rather than with violence against women. Although he was correct in suggesting that poor women were more vulnerable to acts of violence by strangers, he did not entertain the thought that domestic or familial violence could be equally devastating for women. At the same rally, Maniram Bagdi, another "peasant" leader, urged the attending farmers to step up their struggle to such an extent that the Agrarian Populism

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following year "a farmer's son" would hoist the flag over the Red Fort. He was no doubt referring to the impending election. Almost identical language is found among local-level leaders of the Kisan Union. At a meeting of the Danpur branch in Bulandshahr, one of the local leaders said, "On the day that a farmer's son unfurls the flag over the Red Fort, that is the day when our souls will sing. "143 Once again, that it should be a farmer's son is not even an issue. Both the farmer and the politically ascendant offspring are assumed to be male. Male descent is part of a larger discourse about the gender specificity of lineage, in which boys inherit the qualities of their fathers and girls those of their mothers. Explaining why he chose to stay apart from, but not oppose, Ajit Singh, the son of Charan Singh, who originally founded the BKD, Tikait said that he had nothing against Ajit Singh. He did not like Ajit Singh's confidants and associates, however. He pointed out that he couldn't possibly oppose Ajit Singh because of his descent, emphasizing the point with a saying: A girl's like her mother; A son his father. Ifnot much, At least a touch. 144 Tikaifs concern with Rajiv Gandhi's paternal line was therefore entirely consistent with this view of a gendered genealogy. Another way in which to view how discourses of gender were completely naturalized is to consider their use in dealing with subordinate groups. When asked what his organization had done to help harijans, Tikait responded with a telling analogy: "Show me one instance in this village of any harijan being harassed and the aggressor going unpunished. We are compassionate toward harijans. As far as petty quarrels go, even husband and wife are entitled to them. People merely exaggerate discord because they want to politicize every thing." 145 Here is a transposition that explicitly equates social domination to gender inequalities. There is no doubt who is positioned as the "wife" in the "petty quarrels" between supporters of the Kisan Union and harijans. What I have attempted to demonstrate in this section is that the very rhetoric which helps consolidate Bharat as a counterhegemonic populism and which makes its opposition to "India" evident is built on certain powerful exclusions. Whereas in the last section I explored the limits of unity in the face of existing tensions, in this one I focus on the silences and evasions of "peasantist" discourse. The completely taken100

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for-granted, commonsensical elision of place with patriarchy in the construction of Bharat has serious implications for gender inequalities. These inequalities are in turn conjugated to caste and class domination to constitute a naturalized discourse in which the fact of domination remains eternally below the threshold of reflexivity. More generally, the discussion of populism and agrarian politics pursued above demonstrates that populism is not merely an electoral strategy of ruling regimes. 146 It comes to be employed rather forcefully against the governing regime by peasant movements that seek to consolidate a hegemonic bloc by pitting Bharat against India. The discourse of "Bharat versus India" shares all the trademarks of populism outlined earlier: exclusion, a Manichaean characterization of the "other," the articulation of diverse interests through negation, and a claim to speak in the name of "the popular." It is important to contextualize the emergence of populism, employed first by the ruling regime and then by oppositional groups, within the changing contours of the global food economy. The story of agrarian populism was inseparably intertwined with that of the green revolution. But what effects did the green revolution have on India's location in the international food economy? Clearly, one influence was that a period of national self-sufficiency followed the implementation of a green revolution strategy that lasted roughly two decades after the bumper crop of 1970-71. During this period, ruling regimes were protected from the kind of pressure that had been exerted by the United States' manipulation of food aid during the Johnson years. However, fundamental shifts in global political economy, characterized as a period of "late capitalism" by Mandel (1975) or as a regime of flexible accumulation by the regulationists (Harvey 1989), articulated with the world food economy to create new kinds of pressures on domestic agricultural policy. I will now briefly sketch the contours of this global context. The World Food Economy In the Seventle. and Elghtie.

The relatively stable food regime that operated in the aftermath of the Second World War, which had been dominated by the export of American farm surpluses to the Third World at subsidized prices paid in local currencies, unraveled in the early seventies with grain sales to the Soviet Union. 147 The scale of these transactions (three-quarters of all commercially traded grain in the world in 1972-73, for example) created sudden Agrarian Populism

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shortages and inflationary prices. This gave other countries such as Brazil, which had carefully nurtured surpluses with a policy that mixed protection and subsidies, a chance to win a significant market share in high value-added exports such as soymeal. As a result, the U.5. share of world exports fell rapidly in the most important agricultural products. The sudden jump in world food prices and the resulting shortages had two important consequences. First, Third World economies split into two groups. One group, which had until then depended on imports of subsidized American wheat, found itself forced to purchase expensive grain with hard currency. Apart from a few countries that had petroleum, this group of countries experienced a deep debt crisis from the twin shocks of skyrocketing grain and petroleum prices. (Meanwhile, to meet the Soviet demand, American farmers borrowed to expand operations, tripling the farm debt in the 1970S alone [Friedmann 1993:40].) The second group consisted of countries such as Brazil and India, which had successfully "developed" a national agriculture based on subsidies, biochemical inputs, tariff barriers, and price supports. These countries were relatively unaffected by the jump in world grain prices and even joined the group of nations exporting agricultural products. The same events, therefore, had widely discrepant outcomes in different nation-states, depending on the path taken with domestic policies in the past. The second consequence of the disruption caused by the Soviet grain deals was that nation-states such as Japan, which had come to depend on supplies from the United States, started looking elsewhere to diversify their purchases. At the same time, surpluses were being produced by protected agricultural sectors in many different parts of the world-Western Europe, North America, Australia, the larger economies of South America, South Africa, Thailand, and so forth. In the absence of highly subsidized aid from the United States, countries purchaSing on the open market could choose from a variety of suppliers. The collapse of the Soviet market in the 1980s not only drove highly indebted U.5. farmers into bankruptcy in record numbers but also left a world market in which there was both greater competition among national agricultures and tighter interconnections forged by multinational capital (Friedmann 1993:42) .148 For the Third World, these conditions were fundamentally transformed from two directions. First, the debt crisis that swept the Third World in the eighties allowed the IMP and the World Bank to impose structural adjustment policies on the great majority of nation-states. 102

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These "market-friendly" reforms that sought to "get prices right" in effect opened up for multinational capital those remaining economies which had insulated domestic agriculture by protective tariffs. Furthermore, as in the case of India, pressure to reduce the fiscal deficit has meant that agricultural subsidies, which are by now the largest single component of government expenditure, have been put in serious jeopardy and will almost certainly be dismantled in the near future. Structural adjustment, therefore, threatens to overturn a national agricultural program that, through price supports and input subsidies, explicitly modeled itself on the "successful" agricultural policies of "developed" countries. The second direction from which changes were forced on the Third World was the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade. Agricultural issues played a surprisingly large role in the GATT negotiations. Conflicts over agricultural policy between the United States and the European Community threatened to bring down the entire treaty at one stage and completely dominated Western debate and discussion. Although this feature attracted relatively little comment in the West, however, the treaty displays disproportionate zeal in subjecting Third World farmers to the "discipline" of the market, while protecting farmers in Western Europe, Japan, and the United States from the trauma of unduly rapid market reforms (Goodman and Watts 1994:27). Those aspects of the treaty that have drawn the sharpest protest from Third World nationstates deal with biogenetic resources. 149 The combined effect of these two changes has been that in such nation-states as India, where agricultural policy for over two decades has steadily pursued the goal of national self-sufficiency, the agrarian sector has been thrown into turmoil. Structural adjustment and the GATT have split the populist farmer groups described above into factions which support the free market and those which oppose it in the name of nationalism, respectively. Biotechnology and the harvesting of biogenetic resources have introduced further uncertainties into the picture. Finally, the incorporation ofIndian agriculture into global markets through multinational capital has just begun in earnest, with the entry of Pepsico and the giant trading company, Cargill, into the picture. The agrarian sector in India stands on the brink of a major structural transformation, in which the conflicts and confrontations described above will be transformed by the introduction of new issues and new players. However, to understand the direction likely to be taken by these conflicts, the shifts of policy, the pressures exerted from below, and the Agrarian Populism 103

implications of policy shifts for the everyday lives of rural peoples, we have to begin with the kind of map of the complex ideological field that I have attempted to draw here. Conclusion

In this chapter, I have demonstrated the complex interactions between global transformations, governmental ideologies and actions, and the everyday lives of a particular set of rural people by focusing on the agricultural sector. Agriculture occupies a central place in development discourse. Underdevelopment afflicts those nation-states in which a high percentage of the national product comes from agriculture and where a high percentage of the labor force is employed on farms. Therefore, to move "out of agriculture," preferably as fast as possible, is a most desirable goal for a modem nation. These desires are inscribed within plans to "modernize" or "develop" the agricultural sector by appropriate doses of capital and technology. Agriculture, however, is not just a sector in an input-output table. It is a field of power with its own discourses and regimes of truth. It is in these discursive fields that "becoming modem" can be articulated, where institutions can be changed and practices altered. In this chapter 1 have attempted to trace the changing contours of this discursive field, its ideological struggles, idioms, alliances, interests, and organizations. Although I have concentrated on some people in western Uttar Pradesh that 1 grew to know particularly well, my goal has been to convey a broader sense of what the lived experience of modernity might be like in a postcolonial setting. What, specifically, is it about postcolonial conditions that enables us to speak of "alternative modernities"? I have argued that any answer to that question must begin by keeping the relationship between modernity and development in the foreground. The purpose of this chapter has been to establish that one of the dimensions in which the experience of modernity in the Third World is significantly different than in the West is that a sense of underdevelopment, of being "behind," of being "not like" powerful Others, is a constitutive feature of social and political life. 1 have explored how particular representations of modernity embedded in narratives of development circulate in agrarian populism. Rather than seeing "developmentalism" as a hegemonic ideology straightforwardly employed by a coalition of ruling classes, I demonstrate its internal fissures and its contentious redeployment in the discourses of antiurban, rich peasant groups. Therefore, one has to be 104

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careful in asserting that there is something about development that is inherently legitimating of certain classes and sectors. In bringing together analyses of changes in the world food economy, national agricultural policies and programs, and the actions of "peasant" groups, I have tried to show that complex ideological and institutional determinations have shaped the agricultural sector. An understanding of the broader discursive field of development discourse and the role of "scientific" agriculture within it, for example, qualifies the debate about whether the green revolution was imposed on India by external actors for geostrategic reasons and to promote the interests of capital or whether it was independently arrived at by the Indian government. Although there is much to be learned from an exact determination of the latter alternative, it is important to keep in mind that both strategies are compatible with a broader vision of what constitutes development, what it means to be a "modem" nation, and, very important, what the order of nation-states should look like. It is these considerations that lead me to believe that just as the reorganization of national agricultural policy in India in the sixties prompted a shift in the institution and tactics of peasant politics, global changes in the recent past have created and will continue to create new transnational alliances of peasant groups and others who are affected by these changes. And just as populism has been appropriated and turned against ruling regimes, so will contestations of the "market-friendly" ideologies of multilateral institutions and multinational corporations shape the nature of the emerging world system. I have merely hinted at these themes here; their theoretical importance is drawn out in Chapter 5.

Agrarian Populism 105

2 Developmentalism, State Power, and Local Politics in Alipur

H

aving overshot the village, I got off the bus at the next stop and walked back toward Alipur. An older woman heading in the same direction asked me whose house I was going to. For want of a better answer, I said, 'The headman's." "Which one?" she demanded, "we have two headmen in our village-the headman of the thakurs and the headman of the brahmins." In this manner, even before entering Alipur, I had been introduced to its political divisions. A small village in western Uttar Pradesh whose population was approximately seven hundred people in 1984 (see Table 1), Alipur had seen major changes not only in farming practices and techniques but also in the entire pattern of village life, including local politics as a consequence of the widespread adoption of high-yielding varieties of wheat. In this chapter I attempt to trace the relationship between these political divisions and the high-yielding varieties of wheat that had drastically altered forms of agriculture in Alipur. I argued in Chapter 1 that the postcolonial condition for rural people in India needs to be conceptualized within three macro logical frames-development, global capitalism, and technologies of food production. These macrologies intersected in the green revolution and in agrarian populism. Earlier, I demonstrate how, shaped by considerations of national sovereignty and competitive electoral politics, the green revolution and agrarian politics articulated at the national level. Although that analysis helps us understand the success of the green revolution and of peasant politics, it does not tell us how these changes were experienced by villagers in their everyday lives. How did the green revolution change relations and practices of production? What did populism mean in the lives of poor and lower-caste people? What difference did these phenomena make to the

lived relations of dominance and subordination in rural India? By looking closely at social relations and ideologies of domination in one village, we can gain a good understanding of the conjunctures that gave the green revolution and agrarian populism their particular shape in villages such as Alipur. What was the relationship between the political divisions that I observed in Alipur, changing class divisions that accompanied the new agricultural technology, and the policies of the state that had redistributive as well as productivist emphases? At the same time that the government was pursuing a policy of subsidies for electricity and fertilizer that largely benefited well-to-do farmers, it was also prescribing that small parcels of "wasteland" be allocated to lower-caste, lower-class people who had previously been landless. How were these policies implemented, and to what political effect? Did the state's development policies have contradictory effects, exacerbating class tensions while seeking to diminish them? In this chapter I will explore the contradictory effects of "development," particularly in examining how policies intended to create a modem agricultural sector articulated with caste and class ideologies. If, as I contend previously, understanding the postcolonial conditions of farmers entails attending to the speCificities of particular conjunctures of development, global capitalism, and agricultural technology, then my task here is to delineate the manner in which the developmental discourses of a modem nation relate to the differentiating practices of a village in northern India. Questions of postcoloniality become especially pronounced in looking at the implications of developmentalism for relations of class and caste in Alipur. Nationalists charged that the drain of surplus and colonial indifference to the welfare of the population were responsible for India's underdevelopment. Therefore, the end of colonial rule would initiate an era of development; indeed, development became the chief "reason of state" in independent India. As a state project, developmentalism was never conceptualized in narrow economic terms. Rather, in the progressivist ideology of national development, economic changes were seen as triggering social and cultural transformations. For instance, it was believed that economic development would rid the country of social "evils" such as untouchability. Developmentalism had become so much a part of the collective unconscious of nationalist planners and elites that no justification was needed to argue that raising the living standards oflower-caste people would eventually result in the elimination of caste discrimination. And, indeed, given the high corDevelopmentalism, State Power, and Local Politics

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relation between class and caste in rural India, a strategy that visualized class mobility as a necessary feature in combating casteism made eminent sense. But how enthusiastically would such a "progressive" agenda be embraced by primarily upper-caste rural elites? And if they did support it, what reasons would they have for doing so? Examining the political history of Alipur gives us some idea as to why upper-caste rural elites may have thrown their weight behind development programs targeted especially at lower-caste and poor people. But to speak about "the political history" of the village is to presume that there exists a coherent and widely-shared narrative of Alipur's past. Nothing could be further from the truth. It is precisely in the contested narratives of the past that we find different visions of development and varying evaluations of the degree to which "development" has proved successful. Even the end of zamindari, which so clearly marked an era associated with colonial rule, was not considered in an unambiguously positive light by all villagers. Many people who belonged to the dominant, landowning lineage of thakurs interpreted postcolonial efforts at nation building through development projects and quotas in government jobs for scheduled castes as initiating a period leading to corruption in public life and the debasement of social life. Despite their participation in development projects, many thakurs were openly critical of the postcolonial state's development efforts. In contrast to the views of some thakurs stood the large majority of people in Alipur, whose narratives of the past were significantly configured by developmentalism. Previous village headmen were evaluated in terms of whether they brought "progress" to the village and whether people lived together harmoniously: in this manner, the past was assessed in terms of development discourse. Some villagers appropriated the rhetoric of "development" and its claims of improving the living conditions of people in the village in order to criticize severely the unequal and partial distribution of the benefits of development programs. The structural positions of people in Alipur refracted their assessment of the developmental efforts of the state and their narratives of the history of the village. The thakurs' negative evaluation of the developmental efforts of the postcolonial state did not result from its programs for economic growth, which they, like other well-to-do farmers in AIipur, welcomed. Rather, what upset these upper-caste men were the social changes being promoted by the state that disturbed an orderly hierarchy of deference in which control over lower-caste labor was central. l Not surprisingly, it was precisely this ability to refuse the arbitrary 108

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exaction of labor and the capacity to assert their equality that lowercaste people identified as the greatest "benefits" of development (Wadley 1994:5). A thorough understanding of the most important relations of power and inequality in Alipur is necessary to explain the far-reaching transformations in discourses of caste and class that were an integral part of the development efforts of the state. This chapter outlines the relationship between the specific conjunctures of capitalism, developmentalism, and technological change presented in the previous chapter and the agronomical and ecological practices detailed in the following two chapters. I begin with the conflicting narratives of the political history of Alipur. Villagers' narratives of their own histories and the history of the village community were shaped by their pOSitions and perspectives on the development discourses and policies of the postcolonial state. It is this relation of the conflicting narratives of the political history of the village to the larger structural transformations that I will specify in the remaining sections of this chapter. In the second section of the chapter, I tie conflicting narratives of politics in Alipur to changing relations of production. My concern throughout is to understand how these changes were being experienced and understood by different classes and caste groups. I then outline how changing relations of production articulated with state redistributive programs.

Contested Narratives of the Past

In this section I present different narratives of politics in Alipur to explore the contested history of "development" as well as to trace changes in the nature of class and caste domination in one area of rural Uttar Pradesh. When I first arrived there in 1984, social life in Alipur was shaped by political conflicts between two factions. The officially elected headman of the village, Prasad, was a brahmin whose family owned a fairly substantial plot of fertile land (approximately thirteen acres). His opponent, the thakur Sher Singh, was even wealthier and owned approximately twenty-one acres. 2 The thakurs had historically been the village landlords. Although forced to relinquish much of the village land to their hereditary tenants under the Zamindari Abolition Act, they were as a caste group still the largest landowners in the village. 3 While there was considerable agreement regarding thakur dominance in the stories that different informants crafted about the history of Alipur, varying class and caste position did lead to a change in emDevelopmentalism, State Power, and Local Politics

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phasis in narratives about the time of zamindari. The Subedar and the Old Thakur, who belonged to two of the dominant thakur lineages of the village, narrated a story of lost glory. The Subedar said that the area had originally been a "big jungle" where Englishmen came to hunt. The first inhabitants were the banjaras (Gypsies) who settled in the village when they dug the ground and found water at the site that became the main village well. Despite acknowledging the banjaras as the first settlers of Alipur, however, the Subedar proceeded to claim that the rajputs had been its founding inhabitants. They brought along some brahmins and the service castes, who came initially as one or two households and were subsequently followed by others. The most recent inhabitants of the village were the jats. According to the Subedar, when he was young, there had only been one or two jat families in the village, and they had no land of their own. They used to cultivate the zamindar's lands. It was in the last twenty to thirty years that the migration of the jats had increased and they had become a significant caste in the village. According to the Subedar, the will or command [hukum] of the elder brother was always followed in previous generations of thakurs. Even when the land had been divided equally among all the brothers of a lineage, in effect, follOwing the father's death, the eldest made decisions for the entire clan. The oldest brother was the zamindar of the village, and he was like a king. Our ancestors, the Subedar proudly recounted, never had to work in the fields; now, we have no choice but to do our farming ourselves. It used to be that the lambardar (landlord) went to inspect his fields on his horse. Pointing out that the landlord did not even dismount to inspect his fields, let alone tend them himself, the Subedar emphasized the zamindar's distance from manual labor. The zamindar could order people to work for him but, the Subedar claimed, it was a reciprocal relationship. "Not like the present," he added, ''when one has to pay the headman for everything, and the relationship is entirely one-way." He felt that while it was true that the zamindar had taken advantage of the peasant [raiyat] , the peasant benefited from his relationship with the zamindar as well. Service castes like the nais (barbers, who also played an important role as ritual specialists) and the chamaars (leatherworkers) had been brought to the village by the thakurs and settled in Alipur. The Subedar wistfully recalled that they earlier had to work for free on the zamindar's land. "Now, even if we plead with them, they don't want to work for us," he said. The Old Thakur, a former headman, village elder, and relative of the Subedar, told me a similar story about his ancestors, emphasizing their 110

Postcolonial Developments

martial prowess in struggling to control the territory against the Moguls. Curiously, the Old Thakur had little to say about the period under British dominion; instead, he skipped to an earlier history of resistance against "Muslim rule." He claimed that when they first settled in Alipur, the thakurs brought along with them some brahmin and harijan families. "Most of the people in the village now are the direct descendants of the original families. Only some brahmins and jats have come later." The Old Thakur recounted the glorious days of thakur rule: "At the time of zamindari abolition, my father and his brother were the big men in the village. All the land belonged to us but we used to give it out to various castes on sharecropping for cultivation." Almost all the castes cultivated land; one or two families of service castes such as badhais (carpenters), lohars (ironsmiths), nais, and dhobis (washermen) were given a fixed share of the harvest in exchange for their specialized services. According to the Old Thakur, some of the service castes were given fields free of charge as a gift from the zamindar. Others were leased land on plots whose location varied from year to year. "Sometimes a person would be given one plot, and given another the following year. In 1950, people obtained title to whatever land they happened to be cultivating that year. Some people only got a few bighas, others got a lot. It was not distributed very equally. They got the land almost free."4 In the Old Thakur's narrative, the passage of laws abolishing zamindari signaled the decline of thakur rule. Although they corroborated the story told by the thakurs in other respects, people from less powerful castes perceived the end of zamindari in a much more positive light. I was speaking to two men who were of the same age set as the Old Thakur and the Subedar (that is, in their sixties) but who belonged to lower castes. One of them was a jat, perhaps the most prosperous agricultural caste in Alipur, and the other was a kayasth, who had served the zamindars as a clerk and keeper of village land records. Supplementing what the other had to say, or interrupting him to add further details, they spoke as if one person: In those days, the zamindar called you and said, "You cultivate that plot and you cultivate this other one." The tenant didn't have to pay much by way of rent. When the rains came in ashad [in the monsoon season], we went to the zamindar and asked for some fields. He gave some to one man and some to another. If we were unable to pay rent, he seized the fields the next season and rented them Developmentalism, State Power, and Local Politics

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out to someone else. When zamindari abolition became law, the zamindar called all the tenants and distributed twenty to thirty bighas to each of them. They had to pay him for the property, of course, but in those days one didn't have to pay that much for it. Once the plots were allocated to independent cultivators, people started investing in the land. Before that, no one had the incentive to improve the land. Why should they when it could be taken away from them the next year? After getting their own plots, people started digging wells; then they installed waterwheels; after that, tube wells. Rather than see the end of zamindari as signaling a decline, people from intermediate cultivating castes thought that it precipitated a new relationship between cultivators and the land. Since those who received land after zamindari abolition were also its cultivators, they invested in irrigating the land. Thus, the end of zamindari enabled the land to become more productive and, by implication, allowed people who obtained that land to become more prosperous. When I asked Suresh, a brahmin in his thirties who owned a small piece of land, about the history of the village, he narrated a remarkably similar story to the one told by the older men from the other intermediate castes. The zamindar transferred his tenants from plot to plot every year and collected his payment at the end of the winter, or rabi, crop. He did not necessarily favor upper castes in the allocation of land for tenancy. If he felt that a particular tenant might have difficulty in paying his share [the lagaanl, he sent a man armed with a big staff [lath] to the threshing floor. After the grain had been threshed, the zamindar's share was first loaded onto a cart and delivered to his home. The tenant was allowed to remove his share only after the zamindar had received his. It did not matter how little was left for the tenant, said Suresh, the zamindar's share had to be paid first. Suresh thus underlined the extent to which the zamindar's authority rested on his ability to use threats and physical violence to extract the surplus. Suresh informed me that when the zamindars sold off their land, it was mainly bought by the brahmins living in the village. The rest of it was purchased by the first jat families to move into the village and by hhatihs (low caste whose principal occupation in Alipur was horsecart driving), humhars (potters), and chamaars. In Suresh's narrative, the end of zamindari brought about major changes in the power of the thakurs. People who obtained land after zamindari abolition no longer 112

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had to pay land revenues to the thakurs but paid the government directly. Paying land revenues directly to the government, along with the end of the practice of coerced labor called begaar, greatly diminished the thakur's dominance in the political life of the village. The following narrative of the past was constructed by Suresh: Earlier, the thakurs would come in the morning and take whatever bullocks and plows they needed for their own fields. They would say, "We're having a well built today, come and help us dig it." And people would have to go out of compulsion. Since then, begaar has ended. Some people, out of respect for the thakurs, continue to honor them, and that is why they have now become the headman, manager [of the village school), etc. The thakurs think that by occupying these positions, they can continue receiving begaar. That is why they are unused to working. You will not find a pair of bulls today in any of the thakur households. All of them give out their land on bataai [sharecropping) and get free grain at the end of the year. Suresh's implication was that because no farmer could survive without a pair of bulls or a tractor, the thakurs still expected to live off the labor of others rather than do their own work. The "laziness" of the thakurs was commented on frequently by people of all other castes in Alipur, and Suresh's statement fit that pattern. The thakurs were often criticized for living off the prestige that they had enjoyed in the past instead ofbehaving like equals in the present. Suresh reiterated statements made by the other men that investments in land began only after zamindari ended because owners now had some stake in the improvement of their property. After the end of zamindari, the thakurs continued to dominate village politics for some time. Like Suresh, most people in the village remembered that Sukhi Singh, a thakur from the dominant lineage whose father Savera Singh had been the zamindar of the village, became the headman in the period after zamindari abolition and that during his tenure, "the village was one." But the Old Thakur recalled a slightly different, and more complicated, history: "Before 1960,]ahangirpur and Alipur were considered one village for electoral purposes, and so we had one headman who was from ]ahangirpur. Then I became the next headman, followed by Sukhi Singh, Harisaran, Om Pandey, Prasad, and now Sher Singh. Until Sukhi Singh's time, elections were held by raising hands. The police [thanedar) or some other local official used to come, Developmentalism, State Power, and Local Politics 113

gather everyone in a central place, the men on one side and the women on another, and ask them to raise hands." The Old Thakur's order of successive headmen is important in tracing the contested genealogies of factionalism in the village. In referring to the tenure of Sukhi Singh as a period when the village was united, Suresh in the quote above intended to contrast Sukhi Singh's term with the subsequent history of factionalism [party-baazil in Alipur. And the person most people held responsible for the origins of factionalism in Alipur was Om Pandey. The Old Thakur told me that Om's father used to be the thakurs' priest [purohitl, and so they had donated seventy bighas of land to him. From his earliest years, Om was interested only in politics, no matter where he went. He was kicked out of numerous institutions, including a college where he used to teach, for starting cliques and creating trouble. He came back to the village to found a school in the memory of his brother, who had died accidently, with seed money donated by his father. According to the Old Thakur, Om managed to obtain substantial sums from the government to operate the school but embezzled all the funds. No sooner had Om settled down in the village than he started his own faction. He formed a coalition with the other two thakur lineages in the village and with Sukhi Singh's half brothers. The opposite camp was left with just Sukhi Singh and his three brothers from the dominant lineage. But, because he was a brahmin, Om also managed to obtain the support of other brahmins. The Odhs, who live on the brahmin side of the village, threw their weight behind him too. In this manner, Om managed to become the headman of Alipur. Although Suresh was very critical of Om's role in creating factions in the village, he also traced the decline of thakur control [thahur hi rutvaa huch ham ho gayeel to the fact that Om had wrested the headmanship away from them. "Until then, coerced labor still continued, more or less unchecked. When the thakurs were unsuccessful in intimidating people, they tried to get them in trouble with the law on some pretext or the other. This was easy to do since the thakurs were well connected to the police [and still arel." Although the role of Om Pandey loomed large in many villagers' narratives about the origins of infighting and party-baazi, not everyone agreed that factionalism in the village had begun with Om Pandey. Sompal and his spouse, Santoshi Devi, traced the origins of villagewide conflicts to fights among the thakurs that preceded the arrival of Om Pandey in the village by several years. According to Sompal, the conflict 114

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first arose in struggles over property in the dominant thakur lineage. Savera Singh, the eldest of three brothers of the dominant lineage of thakurs, was the zamindar before it was abolished. He had four sons by his first wife-Sukhi Singh, the Old Thakur, and their two younger brothers. As the zamindar, Savera Singh had to collect land rent from his tenants. One household renting land from him in an adjoining village was having difficulty in paying its rent. When he went to collect the rent, a girl in the household, much younger than he was, caught his eye. He brought her to Alipur with him in lieu of the land rent and kept her as his common-law wife. She bore him three sons, Hardeep, Baldaan, and Chotu. With Savera Singh aging, the four sons from his first wife went to court to block the three "illegal" heirs from inheriting a share of the property.5 They lost the case because their uncle (father's younger brother, or FYB) gave testimony that a wedding procession had gone to the woman's house and that a "regular" marriage had actually taken place. Savera Singh had even produced a brahmin priest to testify that he had performed the wedding. Sompal, however, claimed that no such thing had ever happened: Savera Singh had simply brought the woman from the other village to his home and kept her. Since then, there had been intense conflict between the two branches of the family. Sompal's description of conflict among the thakurs was confirmed by others, who clarified that even in the formal political arena of elections for headman, factionalism predated Om Pandey's return to the village. The previous headman, Sukhi Singh, who was from the dominant lineage of thakurs, was challenged in the election for headman by his half brother, Baldaan Singh. My inquiries as to what prompted that challenge were answered by Suresh, who claimed that the reason why Baldaan Singh opposed Sukhi was that, despite having an equal share in their father's property, the younger, "illegitimate" brothers had been kept under the control of the older ones. Sukhi Singh would not allow them to farm their own lands or allow their fields to be leased to tenants. When Baldaan Singh attempted to gain popularity in the village by organizing musical evenings [naach-gaanal at his house, the older brothers called the police to prevent these events. 6 According to Suresh, there was some land (approximately seventyfive bighas) that was to be inherited equally among the seven sons of Savera Singh. But Sukhi Singh confiscated the entire area, thus preventing Baldaan Singh from getting his share. Contesting the elections for headman was Baldaan's central strategy for getting the land back. Had Baldaan won the election, the additional power conferred on him as Developmentalism, State Power, and Local Politics

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headman might have enabled him to recover his share of the lost land. After one term in office, however, Sukhi Singh had alienated enough people in the village that public sentiment was running against him. It was then, Suresh continued, that Sukhi decided to have one of his men stand in his place so that he could continue to control the show without having to face possible public humiliation at the polls. So Harisaran, the keeper of village land records, was elected headman. Harisaran was completely under the thumb of the thakurs. Once, when he mustered the courage to disagree with Sukhi openly, he was "brought to his senses" by a ferocious slap from Sukhi Singh. Thus Sukhi continued to be the de facto headman until Om Pandey unseated him. Once he was made headman, Om Pandey stayed in the village for only a short period, moving to the district headquarters to pursue grander political ambitions. While Om Pandey lived in town, he delegated the day-to-day affairs of the headman's post to Prasad. It was during this period that Prasad acquired the skills to function as the village headman. When I reached Alipur in 1984, Prasad had already been headman for several years, having defeated Sukhi's nephew, the thakur Sher Singh, in a two-way contest. Yet the impact of the election could still be felt. For one thing, the election seemed to have crystallized lines of conflict, forcing people to take sides and subsequently implicating them in new enmities. 7 Prasad won the election by carefully marshaling support from different castes. For example, his assistant and vice-headman, whose position was largely symbolic, was a low-caste (khatik) horsecart driver. To his lower-caste supporters, Prasad promised and delivered benefits flowing from the various development schemes targeted at them. For instance, he assisted some of his landless, low-caste supporters in obtaining titles to small pieces of wasteland owned by the village council. As headman, he was officially responsible for identifying the landless families who qualified for this program. Predictably, families unfortunate enough to have opposed Prasad in the elections had to wait much longer for land even though some of them were more indigent and lower in caste status than those who benefited. 8 According to Sompal, Prasad, following the rules laid out by the government, had demarcated some village council land for a "harijan colony," but he had not distributed land titles for those plots to individuals because in the election the harijans had supported Sher Singh's unsuccessful bid to become headman. Sher Singh made the most of this opportunity to demonstrate his leadership skills by taking the land that Prasad had kept aside for 116

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Table 1. Caste and Household Structure, Alipur, 1984-1985

Caste Brahmin Thakur Jat Odh Badhai Kayasth Dhimar Kumhar Teli Khatik Jatav Harijan Total

Number of people 147 82 106 42 21 15 6

Percentage of population

Number of households

23

21

13 16

14 16

6

9

3 2 1

3 3 1

10

2

2

53 64

8

10

10

10

11

14

72 28

--..1

646

100

_5 108

Notes: There were 118 households in the village. The Mali caste, which consisted of just one household, is not given in this table. Percentages do not add up to 100 because of rounding.

harijan housing, parceling it out, and getting houses constructed. All this was done in exchange for "payment" from the harijans in the form of money and liquor, which Sher Singh no doubt shared with the relevant government officials. Thus, even when Prasad was headman, struggles between him and his defeated opponent continued through their competition to deliver benefits from development programs to their lower-caste supporters. The brahmin Prasad's carefully calibrated pursuit of lower-caste votes had been dictated by the demographics of Alipur. Brahmins and thakurs were a minority and thus needed to seek support from members of the other eleven castes, who were all lower in the ritual hierarchy. The brahmins, the most populous caste in the village, made up less than a quarter of the total population. Numerically, the thakurs were an even smaller group, constituting about one-sixth of the total numbers in Alipur (Table 1).9 Even if a candidate had been sure of getting all his caste votes (and Sher Singh most certainly was not), he would still have needed to obtain a large proportion of lower-caste votes to win the election. Thus, upper-caste aspirants to leadership competed with one another to obtain the support of lower-caste villagers. And one of the Developmentalism, State Power, and Local Politics

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most effective ways of obtaining lower-caste backing was for candidates to promise that they would deliver the fruits of development to their supporters. One factor that may have contributed to Prasad's success in the elections was the deep-seated antipathy felt by many villagers toward Sher Singh. The tenure of the previous headman, Sukhi Singh, Sher Singh's uncle (father's elder brother, or FEB), had been marred by what most people in the village saw as unmitigated greed. Sher Singh himself had an unfortunate reputation in this and other regards, and his support derived mainly from his ability to browbeat less powerful people. In 1985, a close kinsman and supporter of Sher Singh told me that if any thakur other than Sher Singh had contested the election, he would easily have won, a claim that I regarded with some skepticism. The same person told me that people deliberately called Sher Singh "headman" [pradhanl to taunt him. Whatever their intentions, it was clear that Sher Singh thought he still had a legitimate claim to the post despite having lost the election. Sher Singh continued to wield considerable influence within the village, derived in no small part from his connections with the police and bureaucracy. Santoshi Devi told me that even during Prasad's tenure as headman, many people went to Sher Singh when they needed help with bureaucratic matters. They preferred to ask Sher Singh for help because, even if he skimmed some money for himself, he knew how to pay bribes and get the job done. Santoshi Devi claimed that Sher Singh's lack of success at the polls did not prevent him from functioning as if he were the headman. When fights broke out, for instance, Sher Singh was often called on to settle the dispute. The reason, according to some, was that Sher Singh had good relations with the local police. He fed them, bought them liquor and drank with them, and functioned as their snitch [guftgool in the village, supplying them with information that enabled them to extract bribes. Much of his power in the village derived from his relationship with the police. When I inquired why other people in the village did not bother to cultivate good relations with the police, I was told that very few people wished to get mixed up with "bad elements" and hoodlums like the police. 10 When I returned to Alipur in 1989 for a second round of fieldwork, new elections for the headman had taken place in which Sher Singh had defeated a lower-caste candidate, Ram Singh. Although I reached there several months after the elections, the village was still buzzing with election gossip. Prasad had chosen to step down instead of mounting u8

Postcolonial Developments

another bid for the headmanship. One of his supporters informed me that Prasad had opted not to contest the elections because he had accepted too many bribes; had he been elected again, there were sure to be some court cases filed against him. So he strategically stepped aside and, instead, threw his weight behind Ram Singh. Ram Singh was an older jatav man who lived on his farm on the outskirts of the village in a little hamlet founded by his grandfather and inhabited exclusively by his extended kin. When I spoke with Ram Singh, he expressed extreme bitterness about what had transpired in the elections. He told me that he had been hoodwinked into contesting the elections, for the people who encouraged him to run knew that he did not stand a chance of winning. Some time before the elections, a panchayat (village meeting) was called to arrive at a decision about the next headman. According to Ram Singh, all the castes [saat jaat] were present, including the thakurs, brahmins, and jats. There, Ram Singh was unanimously chosen headman. He was elected unopposed. It was only after that meeting that Sher Singh and the other thakurs demanded a "proper" election, saying that they would not accept the outcome of the meeting. At that point, Prasad and others encouraged Ram Singh to contest the election. They told him that the village was tired of Sher Singh's antics. They reasoned that matters would become that much worse if Sher Singh was elected headman. They convinced him that no one would vote for Sher Singh and that he would easily win the election. Ram Singh claimed that had the people of the settlement [basti kay log] not persuaded him that he would easily be elected, he would not have sought the headmanship. He was not interested in creating factions. Had he not been misled and had he been told the full story, he would have opted out of the competition even after declaring his candidacy. Ram Singh felt that, initially, people in the village were on his side. 'Then, God knows why, they began to oppose me almost overnight." His explanation was that many people did not perceive him to be a resident of Alipur: "Although we live in Alipur, although we vote here, although our fields are here, we are still considered outsiders. People say that we are just like anyone else, but in their hearts they still think of us as outsiders. We used to live in Shadipur but have settled here for a long time." There was indeed something to the fact that Ram Singh did not reside in the nucleated settlement that constituted "the village" but in an outlying hamlet. In a discussion about the relationship of Alipur to its hamlets, Suresh elaborated on Ram Singh's ambivalent location: Developmentalism, State Power, and Local Politics

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They are now considered part of the village because they started living within its boundaries [gaon hi haddl, and bought their land from a thakur of the village. Before that, they were considered residents of Shadipur. They used to vote there but they now vote in Alipur. They have extensive social relations with people in Alipur. They call all the chamaars of the village for their feasts and are in turn invited by the chamaars in the village on all social occasions. By contrast, only a select few are invited from Shadipur, only those who are particularly close. They don't intermarry either here or in Shadipur. When a girl from Ram Singh's hamlet gets married, our villagers are unlikely to say, "A girl from our village is getting married [hamaare gaon hi ladhi hi shaadi hainl." Since the hamlet is far away and stands independently as its own village, it has some relations with Alipur, but they are not terribly dense. For example, if a fight breaks out between them and a resident of Alipur, I would be inclined to take the side of our villager. Despite living and voting in Alipur, routinely attending social events of their caste, and observing the rule against endogamy vis-a-vis Alipur, villagers did not necessarily treat Ram Singh's hamlet as their own, as was evident from Suresh's remarks about whom he would side with in a conflict and about not claiming women of the hamlet as "daughters of the village." It is significant that membership in the village community should have been indexed by claims to the ownership of women's bodies and specifically to a patriarchal relationship embedded in the notion that a marriageable young woman was "a daughter" of the village (men). The boundaries of the village, the space of the community, depended centrally on gender relations. Ram Singh may have been securely positioned as a member of the village by the political and developmental apparatuses of the state, but his status as a member of the village community was far more ambiguous. Suresh clearly thought that Ram Singh would have obtained more votes had he been a resident of the main settlement. Ram Singh was silent on the role of caste in the explanation he offered for his electoral loss. Perhaps he did not wish to voice his frustrations in that regard. Everyone else I spoke with emphasized the role played by Ram Singh's lower-caste status. His opponents clearly exploited that fact to the hilt. One thakur told me that in the last two days before the election, Sher Singh's supporters had managed to make real headway by playing up Ram Singh's lower-caste status. They were especially suc120

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cessful in persuading older brahmins that they would regret making a chamaar the headman. They were told that whenever they needed the headman's assistance or intervention, they would have to trudge the long distance to his hamlet. In turn, when he visited them, they would have to welcome him and offer to seat him at the upper end of the cot. lI They would have to behave in a deferential manner toward him and say, "Please, sir, do take a seat" [Aao ji, pradhanji, baitho]. This tactic made its impact and managed to swing a number of voters toward Sher Singh, despite his generally poor reputation among the brahmins. One such brahmin told me that he had not voted for Ram Singh because he thought that a lower-caste person [neech jati] would act in a degraded way. Apart from raising doubts about Ram Singh's affiliation to the village and attacking his lower-caste status, Sher Singh also resorted to intimidation and force to win the election. In this light, the margin of victory-the difference between the two candidates in the number of votes received-was a highly contested "fact," as various people attempted to guess what the difference was between the "official" count and the "actual" one. Sher Singh's opponents either deliberately exaggerated the size of the margin of victory to highlight the extent of cheating or reduced the official margin to suggest how close the election had in fact been. A brahmin who repeatedly claimed "We elected Sher Singh" nevertheless insisted that Sher Singh had won by a very narrow margin of less than 45 votes. On the other hand, Ram Singh himself maintained that as a result of the intimidation tactics, he received only 90 to 100 votes out of 475 on Alipur's voter list. Yet another thakur man told me that Sher Singh had won by a substantial majority of approximately 125 votes. All the people I spoke with, whether supporters or opponents of Sher Singh, agreed that cheating had occurred during the elections. And all attributed the cheating to the fact that some women who supported Sher Singh managed to cast multiple votes. My reconstruction of what happened in the elections is based on accounts offered by several people who described, in almost identical terms, the exact mechanism by which cheating had taken place. Each candidate was allowed to have an "agent" inside the polling site. Voters filed into the site, had their names ticked off on the voter list, and were handed the ballot paper. Unlike the parliamentary election, voters' hands were not marked with indelible ink after they had voted. If either of the agents of the candidates were unsure of the eligibility of a potential voter, they could challenge him or Developmentalism, State Power, and Local Politics

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her, depositing a small sum of money for every voter that they challenged. Election officials, who were appointed by the government, then had to verify the identity of the voter by taking that person outside and asking the people standing around to identify him or her. Given that all these precautions were in place to prevent cheating, the two main methods of cheating were to have people cast votes several times, once in their own name and a second time in someone else's, and to pad the voter registration list with extra names. Both these techniques were fully used in the election. Some people claimed that Ram Singh's biggest mistake lay in choosing an agent who did not recognize the women from the village. The reason why it was harder to identify women was that it was customary for women, especially those from the upper castes, to cover their faces when talking to or passing by men, particularly older men and outsiders. A man who had grown up in the village could perhaps identify all the women by sight, but one from outside had no hope of doing SO.12 Thus, although women were not represented as candidates in the election, village politics hinged crucially on women, and it was precisely their lack of visibility that enabled them to become so politically significant. Once again, women functioned to indicate membership in the village community. A man's ability to identify a woman voter successfully depended heavily on whether he had grown up in the village or was an outsider. Women, therefore, were positioned at the very center of a contest in the overtly masculine sphere of village politics. Ram Singh himself identified this to be the major difficulty in his election tactics: "Our problem was that no one from here [his settlement] could recognize the women from that side of the village. When I asked someone from the village to be our agent, no one agreed. They were all afraid [dhaisat khaa gaye]. Finally, Mirpal [a younger, lowercaste man] agreed." "So you did have someone from the village?" I countered. He dismissed the significance of this fact: "What good did it do? He [Mirpal] was so afraid that he didn't challenge anyone. The night before, Sher Singh went to Mirpal's house and threatened to kill him if he created any problems. His wife and family were so afraid that they all voted for Sher Singh. He did not dare to challenge anyone who was voting for the second or third time. It all goes to show that the weapons that rest on another's shoulder are useless [doosrey ki kandhe pey hatyaar kisi kaam key nahin]." I heard a similar story from others, but an additional piece of information was added, which was subsequently verified by the man who served as Sher Singh's agent. It appears that early in the process 122

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of voting, Mirpal had in fact challenged the credentials of one woman. Sher Singh's agent was his paternal cousin, a burly and aggressive man, who started quarreling with Mirpal and then slapped him hard two or three times. After that, Mirpal did not dare to challenge anyone, and many women voted several times. In this way, the voter turnout was recorded to be a fantastic 90 percent, although a great many people on the list of registered voters were not even present in the village at that time. If Sher Singh had not been sure of victory by then, I was told jokingly, the voter turnout might well have exceeded 100 percent. When I spoke to Ram Singh, he appeared disgusted with the whole process: 'The thakurs intimidated the 'small' [lower-castel people [chotey logon ko daraa diyal. I have never seen a place where people were such cowards as in this village. And it wasn't just the lower-caste people; the whole village was intimidated by him [Sher Singhl. Even the lower castes did not support me fully. They were all afraid of Sher Singh. Elections these days are fought on the strength of one's arm." Others in the village repeated this sentiment in almost identical language. I was told that apart from garnering the votes of those lower-caste people who lived on the side of the village closest to the thakurs, Sher Singh managed to split the votes of jats and brahmins. These caste groups had supported Prasad in the previous election. Ram Singh had difficulty in gathering the votes of people from his own caste in the village because he was seen as Prasad's candidate. And during Prasad's tenure as headman, the jatavs did not receive any benefits because they were perceived to be in Sher Singh's camp. The history of factional politics, therefore, determined who the beneficiaries of development programs were; in turn, the pattern of distribution of benefits affected future support. Yet, a straightforward determination of interests would be insufficient to explain why some brahmins and jats voted against Ram Singh, just as an explanation based on caste vote-banks could not account for why jatavs failed to rally around Ram Singh. 13 Several people gave me a detailed breakdown of who voted for one candidate and who for the other. 'This time, families were split," confided Sompal. "How do you know?" I asked. "Isn't the voting by secret ballot?" He replied: 'The truth comes out because people tell their closest friends and then everyone comes to know. For example, people would come to me and say, 'I'll take an oath to vote for the candidate that you have decided to support.''' In this way; Sompal maintained, although no one could tell for sure, everyone had "a good idea" of how individuals voted. Developmentalism, State Power, and Local Politics

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From the description of village politics given so far, several themes emerge clearly. The elections for headmen were keenly contested affairs, in which the successful candidate had to make a concerted effort to obtain the support of lower-caste voters. No lower-caste person had ever been elected headman, and Ram Singh was in fact the first such person even to aspire to that position. Ram Singh's defeat indicated the extent to which village politics was predicated on gender, since everyone acknowledged that Sher Singh won the election because women who supported him voted multiple times. Gender was also critical to assessments of who belonged to the village community and who did not, a fact that also hurt Ram Singh. The winners of village elections rewarded their supporters by making them the beneficiaries of development programs. In turn, voters' decisions depended on whether they had gained from development programs or had been excluded from them. One of the chief benefits that headmen could dispense to lowercaste supporters was ownership rights to village council land. Caste, community, land, gender, and development were thus closely tied together in village politics. In addition to the headman, voters also chose a nine-member village council [gram panchayatl. Village governance was supposed to be in the hands of this council and not vested in the headman alone. The village was divided into "wards," with a member of the village council chosen from each one such that people from different castes and factions ideally found some representation on the village council. Two of the elected members of Alipur's council, for example, told Sher Singh explicitly that they would never sign any proposal that he put forth as the headman. Although women were supposed to be guaranteed 30 percent of the seats on the village council by government decree, there were no women on the ballot. After his election, Sher Singh added the name of Santoshi Devi, Sompat's spouse, to the list of representatives. She told me that, as a token representative, she signed anything that Sher Singh brought to her. Sher Singh never did consult the village council, preferring to make all decisions by himself. But because he needed written proof that at least five of the nine members of the council supported him, after he had decided to undertake a particular course of action, he would go round individually to the members of the council who were his friends and clients and ask them to sign the register. Unlike Prasad, Sher Singh did not appear to be interested in rewarding supporters. One person, who was eventually elected to the village council, had openly announced that he would not vote for Sher Singh 124

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under any circumstance. Instead of punishing this man for his opposition, one of the first things that Sher Singh did after the election was to arrange to have the government-sponsored creche [anganwadil moved to the man's house. There was speculation that Sher Singh had arranged the move of the creche to win that person's support for decisions that needed the village council's endorsement. Several people told me that Sher Singh's concern with village governance extended only as far as the next bottle of liquor. One of his relatives confided: "He drinks a bottle [of country liquor] practically every day. Sometimes, he misses a day. Then he announces the next morning, 'I've given up drinking.' If someone asks him how long its been, he says he hasn't had any liquor for a whole day!" Another man joined in, saying: "Sher Singh does nothing but drink liquor and eat buffalo [katral and goat [bakral. The only thing lacking are dancing girls, and that too shouldn't prove too difficult to arrange."14 The significance of these remarks lay in the fact that money for liquor had to be obtained from bribes and payoffs, and Sher Singh extracted it with a practiced ease. During Prasad's tenure as headman, Sher Singh had helped some harijan families circumvent the headman's authority and build homes on land designated for that purpose by the village council. After being elected headman, Sher Singh threatened to tear down the "illegal" construction that he himself had earlier sponsored. It took a payoff to keep him quiet. After that, he approached those households again and told them that, as headman, he would have the house sites officially registered in their names in exchange for some cash. They paid up, but he just pocketed the money and took no action. It was unlikely that the harijans would ever get deeds to their property. Although Sher Singh's election as headman might well be interpreted as the "return" of thakur dominance in village politics, such an interpretation would seriously miss the underlying structural changes that made Sher Singh's tenure as headman so different from that of his uncle. Since Sher Singh's time, development programs and the green revolution had fundamentally altered the nature of village society. Sher Singh, like any other candidate for the headmanship, had to promise that he would deliver development programs to his lower-caste and landless supporters. This role in fact enabled him to earn substantial sums of money through kickbacks and bribes, which outweighed his earnings from farming, and took up most of his time. But exactly how important did landownership and landlessness continue to be for politics in Alipur? Developmentalism, State Power, and Local Politics

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Patrons and Proletarians

One of the first major policies of the postcolonial era was the abolition of zamindari, which severed the hold that large, mostly absentee landlords had on the rural population. Because these landlords were also the closest allies of the colonial government in rural areas, there was a nationalist edge to zamindari abolition. But what did the elimination of zamindari do for class privilege? How did it change relations between landowners and landless people? What can we deduce about relations of power from patterns of landownership in Alipur today? We can learn a great deal about relations of power in Alipur by tracing the interaction of caste and class within the changes occurring in the system of patronage. A system of patronage and dependence built on landownership and tenancy declined, but development programs and populism created new mechanisms of patronage. How were these processes experienced by people belonging to different classes and castes? Zamindari abolition had a dramatic impact not only on the lives of the landlords but also on the middle peasant groups, who gained ownership of land, and on landless people, who gained freedom from forced labor. Other important changes occurred after the abolition of zamindari. The green revolution had been introduced into western Uttar Pradesh, drastically altering cropping patterns, land use, and demand for labor. And accompanying the green revolution were other kinds of government programs aimed at alleviating poverty and raising the living standards of lower-caste and poor people. In the previous section I charted the history of village political alliances; in this section I attempt to provide an explanation for the changing nature of factionalism in Alipur by relating it to developmentalism and agrarian capitalism. How did the changing nature of local politics articulate with state-sponsored development strategies-in particular, the introduction of an intensive, capitalist agriculture? Although the abolition of zamindari took village land out of the exclusive control of one extended family and distributed it more widely, it did not fundamentally alter a system in which land provided the means to bind clients and dependents to powerful patrons. Patronage is essentially a relationship that locks land, labor, and credit markets either in combinations of two or all together (Bardhan 1980; Srivastava 1989a). For example, a patron might extend consumption credit to a client in the lean season in exchange for guaranteed labor, either unpaid or underpaid, in the peak season. 15 126

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In Alipur, tenancy was the main kind of patron-client relationship (Srivastava 1989b). An examination of the different kinds of tenancy found in the village showed that it combined land and credit markets, land and labor markets, or all three. There were four chief forms of tenancy, which varied in their duration and terms (see Table 2). The most common form was the pure sharecropping [bataaiJ model. In this arrangement, the landlord rented the land to the tenant for the entire agricultural cycle. The costs of all inputs, including purchased inputs such as fertilizer, irrigation water, pesticides, and hired labor, were evenly shared between owner and tenant. The tenant was responsible for field preparation, sowing, and weeding. The costs of harvesting with hired labor were split, and the resulting grain was equally divided between landlord and tenant. The cost of threshing was borne individually. Sharecropping had the disadvantage that it required close consultation between landlord and tenant, as decisions to purchase inputs and hire labor depended on both parties. Landlords who either lived outside the village or did not wish to work as closely with tenants employed other options in leasing out their land. One of their options consisted of leasing out land for cash (peshagi). By the time I first reached Alipur in 1984, this form of tenancy had, according to villagers, declined in importance. Cash rentals had the hallmark of simplicity: the tenant paid a fixed sum at the beginning of the agricultural year and then had to bear all responsibility for the crop. A similar and more widely used arrangement consisted of payment in kind [jins J. The big difference between jins and peshagi was that jins required payment in kind at the end of the agricultural year, whereas peshagi mandated payment in cash at its beginning. In 1984-85, jins payments were usually fixed at 2-2'/2 manlbigha (approximately 5-6.5 quintals/acre). Although the contract was for the entire agricultural year, the tenant could decide whether to pay none, half, or all the rent at the end of the first season [kharij]. It was the usual practice for tenants to pay half the rent at the end of the kharif season and the remaining half at the end of the rabi season. Since maize, the usual crop grown in the kharif, sold for far less than wheat, the main crop in the rabi season, it made sense for tenants to pay at least some portion of the annual rent in maize rather than wait to pay the entire quantity in wheat. If there was an especially bad year, a landlord might agree to a share of the crop rather than demanding the agreed-upon quantity specified in the jins contract; this, however, was entirely the landlord's prerogative. In addition to these annual leases, a type of tenancy contract used Developmentalism, State Power, and Local Politics

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Table 2. Types of Tenancy Contracts, Alipur, 1984-1985

Name of Sharecropping Contract

Seed (TIL)

Fertilizer (T:L)

Water (T:L)

Bataai (sharecropping) Peshagi (cash rental) Jins (in-kind rental)

T T T

1:1

1:1

T T

T T

Chauthaai (quarter share)

L

1:3

1:3

Notes: T = tenant's responsibility; L = landlord's responsibility; Own = each responsible for own share; T:L = ratio of tenant's share to landlord's share.

frequently in the monsoon or kharifharvest was the chauthaai (literally, "a quarter"). This was an arrangement of task-specific contract work akin to wage labor. In this contract, the landlord was responsible for field preparation and sowing. Once the field had been tilled and the crop planted, responsibility passed over to the tenant, who did the weeding, supplied the labor for irrigation, protected the crop from birds and pests, and harvested the cobs. The costs of irrigation water were split between the landlord and tenant so that the latter paid a quarter of the total. The output was split in the same ratio: the landlord got three shares to one for the tenant. The main costs of harvesting com consisted in husking, but that was done after the output had already been split. Production loans were not uncommon but, in most cases, were made in the context of tenancy: the landlord gave seed to the tenant, receiving in exchange 25 percent more as interest at harvest time. 16 Another, minor form of tenancy was found in raising cattle on a share basis. Typically, an owner would "loan" a calf to another villager who would feed and care for it until maturity. When it was sold, the returns would be evenly split: if either the original owner or the "tenant" wanted to retain the animal, they would pay the other party half the market price. The bond formed through relationships of tenancy was not an enduring or stable one because of two features. The first of these was the phenomenon of tenant rotation or tenant switching. Landlords in Alipur were well aware of the law that stipulated that tenants who cultivated the same plot for three consecutive years could claim ownership rights to it. Consequently, they were careful to switch tenants every year or every 128

Postcolonial Developments

Harvesting Labor (T:L)

Threshing Labor

T T T

1:1

Own T T

1:1

T T

T

1:3

Own

1:3

Field Preparation Labor

Weeding Labor

(TIL)

(TIL)

T T T L

(TIL)

Division of Product (T:L)

None Prefixed amount to landlord

Length of contract for first three types: kharif and rabi crops. Length of contract for chauthaai just kharif crop.

two years. Or, if they owned more land than they could cultivate themselves, landlords sometimes switched plots while retaining the same tenant, although this was relatively uncommon. 17 The second noteworthy feature in tenancy contracts was the limited length of the lease period. Even tenants who were given plots for two years had to renew the lease at the end of the first agricultural cycle (usually defined as covering the kharif and rabi harvests). The yearly lease was the reason most often cited by tenants for not applying such productivity-enhancing inputs as organic or green manure, for in the "indigenous" system of agronomy manure was considered efficacious for as long as three years. 18 The qualitative changes that made tenancy less important as a form of patronage in Alipur were complemented by a decline in the frequency of tenancy itself. 19 During the main harvest season (the winter rabi crop) of 1984, I observed that only 49 of 303 plots cultivated were rented out. Of these, 33 (or about 10 percent) were rented within the village, amounting to just 3 percent of the total cultivated area. A closer analysis reveals that only 2 of these 33 plots were rented by higher-caste owners to lower-caste tenants (Table 3).20 The figures for the kharif harvest were not very different. It is thus obvious that tenancy was not an important means by which to recruit clients. 21 As opposed to the time of zamindari, by 1984 landownership had quite clearly ceased to be the central means of extending patronage to landless clients. This had important implications for village politics, as it made evident that the labor of lower-caste, lower-class households was no longer tied to the land owned by upper-caste, upper-class landowners.22 Developmentalism, State Power, and Local Politics

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Table 3. Land Rented Out by Villagers, Number of Cases, Rabi Crop, Alipur, 1984-1985

Caste of Tenant

Caste of Landlord Brahmin Thakur Jat Other lower castes Total

Brahmin

Thakur

Jat

0

0

0

2

2

2

0

5

0

0

3

2

Other Lower Castes

Total

0

6

2

17

7 19

9

19

33

Landownership in the village continued to be highly unequal and stratified. Figure 1 shows that the three upper castes-brahmins, thakurs, and jats-controlled 90 percent of agricultural land owned by all villagers. 23 Superimposing Figure 2 on the first map demonstrates that the largest plots in the village belonged to these three castes, and particularly to the thakurs. The mean size of thakur landholdings was twice as high as that for brahmins and jats (13.6 acres per household as opposed to less than 7 acres for the other two castes). Taking land quality into consideration would have demonstrated an even sharper divergence between the (on average) large plots of high-quality land owned by upper-caste groups and the small, fragmented plots of marginal land held by the lower castes. For example, yields of the main crop, wheat (see Figure 3), on land owned by brahmins was twice as high as yields on plots owned by lower castes (216 kg/bigha as opposed to 108 kg/ bigha for the lower castes). Figures 4,5, and 6 demonstrate that yields per acre were rising, that annual wheat production had trebled in the district between 1961 and 1982, and that the area devoted to wheat in the rabi crop had doubled in the same period. In contrast to the goodquality land owned by the upper castes, just a few lower-caste, mostly jatav, families owned substantial pieces of good-quality land. Despite the continuing inequalities in landownership, the decline of tenancy and the system of patronage that depended on tenancy had tremendous repercussions for relations within the village. For instance, I once walked into a particularly ferocious argument involving a lowercaste laborer and one of the thakurs from the dominant lineage. The dispute arose because the laborer helped himself to a cucumber growing 130

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on the thakur's plot while walking past. The thakur angrily denounced him, saying that lower-caste people behaved as if they had the same rights as during the time of zamindari but were unwilling to reciprocate in the expected manner-that is, by providing free labor and by showing "due" respect to upper-caste people. The laborer, on the other hand, complained that the thakurs had become stingy and petty and gave as evidence the fact that such a fuss had been made over one cucumber. He added that the thakurs failed to pay their workers adequately or on time and in the requisite amounts and that they behaved as if they could continue to exploit "small" people as they had done historically. What is significant about this episode was not merely that the thakur's and the lower-caste laborer's assessments of each other's "proper" behavior diverged so much but also that the laborer could voice his criticism so freely. 24 Other upper-caste people in Alipur, who did not experience to the same degree the thakurs' perception of lost privilege, nevertheless positioned lower-caste self-assertion as part of the breakdown of a nostal-

Figure 1. Ownership of Land by Caste, Alipur, 1984-1985 Caste Brahmin

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Size (acres) Less than 1.0

Figure 2. Size Distribution of Holdings, Alipur, 1984-1985

gically invoked period of village harmony. It is interesting that this period of village harmony was seen as occurring before massive state interventions in the form of the green revolution and development programs had made their impact on village life. In contrast to the usual glowing self-assessments of their own village, people in Alipur repeatedly asked me: "Why have you come here? This is one of the most useless villages in India. There was a time when everyone lived together harmoniously. Now men do not trust their own brothers."25 Significantly, village harmony was measured entirely in terms of male relationships-of how men dealt with one another-and not at all in terms of relationships between women. These themes were elaborated and qualified by Ranbir Singh, a wellto-do jat farmer who had inherited a fair amount of very high-quality land from his uncle. Before Ranbir Singh took over the day-to-day oversight of the farm, his uncle employed two lower-caste servants and two sharecroppers to look after the farm. Ranbir's views of a more harmonious time in the past, when people knew their proper place, may have been tinged with nostalgia, but they were also shaped by a shrewd 132

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appreciation of the changes in social relations wrought by new technologies. Ranbir maintained that when the village barber [nai}, sweeper [bhangi), smith [lahar), water carrier [dhimar), tailor, and so on were paid a fixed amount every agricultural season [chamai, literally, "six months"}, "Everyone worked in their own place, and worked willingly and with enthusiasm." In saying this, Ranbir was implicitly contrasting the present to a time when people "willingly" accepted social inequalities (Wadley 1994:81-92). These people left their traditional occupations, he maintained, because they became concerned about their status: "Earlier, all these chamaars, and so forth, would be working for the farnIer. Now their children, having been educated, became teachers or judges. If the child has the position of a judge, will the parent want to work in the field? He will want to be respected once his child is a judge!" According to Ranbir, this was the difference between the past and the present. It was not that hereditary occupations could no longer be followed but that younger people in the service castes no longer wanted to do low-status work. Unlike many upper-caste men, Ranbir's perspective

Figure 3. Winter (Rabi) Crop

Preferred

rop

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2.5

2.0

OJ ....

~ u

OJ

:t: .... OJ

1.5

p.

Ul

OJ

= = f-< 1.0 0

.5

:g

;;

0.5

0.0 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 Year

Figure 4. Annual Wheat Yield, Bulandshahr District

on the abandonment of "traditional" occupations was not simply one of loss. He maintained that "when they stopped practicing their occupations, the question of good or bad doesn't arise." He felt that service castes had improved their position in society because their children had been able to go to school and obtain decent jobs. Ranbir's example of lower-caste children becoming teachers and judges commented on the new opportunities that had opened up owing to state programs specifically targeted at providing schooling and jobs to lower-caste people. But it was also a comment on the displacement of traditional occupations by state policies to promote the green revolution. Ranbir felt that the bonds between people had weakened because farmers and service castes were no longer dependent on each other: [Traditional occupations] used to maintain village society. Suppose I want to have a plow made by the carpenter. Now that the impact of tractors has increased, I figure why keep these two oxen? There is the expense of fodder, giving them water, green fodder, all these expenses have to be incurred. But when I don't have any work to give to the carpenter, when I don't need to get a plow made at all, then I approach the tractor person and do the plowing with a tractor. Replacing the oxen and the plow with a tractor thus not only reduces the demand for the carpenter's labor but also weakens the relationship of the farmer with the carpenter:

134

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There is a definite difference in our relationships. When we have no business with someone, then we won't go to their place, or visit only rarely. If we visit rarely, we will not develop feelings of affection [prem bhaavnaa]. [We might think about visiting but ask,] What will we do there? Today, ifI need to do so, I'll go to [the carpenter's place] to get a wooden peg made [to tie cattle]. If we visit more often, we will also sit there for a while, listen to his concerns, share some of our own thoughts, meet four other brothers who are sitting there, and all of that encourages relations with others. That increases our affection for others instead of decreasing it. We use the same reckoning as you do when you visit us: you think that this is a place where I will receive some affection [prem hi jagah hail. [You know that] when you come here, we will make arrangements for tea, we will make arrangements for food, and in this way our affection for each other will increase. But if you visit rarely, then we too will not give it much importance, then our affection for each other will remain low. Ranbir thus traces the weakening of the once strong ties between people in the village community to changing means of production, as well as to the unprecedented ability of a younger generation oflower-caste people to distance themselves from low-status occupations. Both these changes could be directly traced to the developmental efforts of the postcolonial state. Although their specific origins lay in different development initia500,000 450,000 400,000

'" 350.000

""" 300,000 0

f-o

.S

'" ~

..c:: "

250,000 200,000 150,000 100,000 50,000

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61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 Year

Figure 5. Annual Wheat Production, Bulandshahr District

Developmentalism, State Power, and Local Politics

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250,000

200,000

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150,000

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Figure 6. Wheat Cultivation Area, Bulandshahr District

tives, changes in the methods of production associated with the green revolution and a rapid expansion in job opportunities for lower-caste people both resulted from the state's efforts to bring about economic development. Other people also commented on the decline of affection among villagers. Two older men took a frankly nostalgic view of the changes they had witnessed in their own lifetimes: 'The degree of affection [mohabbatl that one saw before is no longer to be witnessed today. Now brothers are at one another's throats. Earlier, if there were four brothers, they would sit together in the evening and share their joys and sorrows. Children did not dare speak to their parents. A younger brother wouldn't even venture to smoke a hookah in the presence of his elder, 26 leave alone actually eat a meal. Now, even young boys tell their fathers, 'Let me take two or three puffs from the hookah, old man.' " In this view, the decline of affection for others is part of a larger transformation of an orderly social world in which age hierarchies were strictly respected. 27 Many people in the village suggested that one of the main reasons why "brothers [were] at one another's throats" was that increased consumerism and competition had led to the growth of envy. If someone prospered, others were jealous and wished him ill. If the growth of consumer desire can be charted to changing industrial policies in India's development plans, the change of abilities to fulfill that desire can be traced to the surpluses generated by the introduction of green revolution wheat to this region. It was clear, however, that relations between lower and upper castes 136

Postcolonial Developments

and classes were changing for reasons other than the fact that service castes had given up on "traditional" occupations. As my informants made clear, the majority of lower-caste people had always worked as agricultural laborers, rather than occupational specialists. Whether they were illiterate or semieducated, unskilled laborers or skilled craftsmen, lower-caste men preferred to seek employment outside the village rather than work for those upper-class, usually upper-caste households of Alipur that wished to hire wage laborers. When I asked why such was the case, I received sharply diverging answers, depending on the caste and class position of the person to whom I had posed the question. 28 Ranbir, largely a self-sufficient middle peasant, who hired laborers occasionally, complained that labor rates had risen faster than inflation. The reason, he claimed, was that laborers could find work more easily than before in the town. They went to town in the morning and found daily labor in factories. The farmer could afford to pay them only Rs 30, whereas they were paid Rs 50 in the factories; thus, they preferred not to work for farmers. 29 Ranbir's statements need to be contextualized by noting that the high cost of daily labor was the most frequently recurring theme in the discourse of farmers and landowners in Alipur. Lower-caste and lower-class people had a completely different perspective on this question. I was speaking to a group of lower-caste men about why they preferred not to labor in the fields: "There is less work [the wages are low] in the village, and it is not available on time. Outside [the village], the wages are good and paid on time. We can work for a month or ten days outside, then come back to the village and stay for five days, then go out and work for another stretch." Not being paid on time for the day's labor was the workers' biggest frustration. Anil, a younger, jatav man, elaborated: Laboring in the village means you have to go to work before the sun is out and can return only after the sun has set. Sometimes you get enough time to eat in the afternoon, and sometimes you don't. They make you work for fourteen hours, and after that, if the laborer goes to get his wages the next day, he is told, "Your aunt [chaachi] is not here, come in the evening." If you go in the evening, after the usual formalities, you are told, "Your grandma [daadil has gone to such-and-such place, she has taken the key with her, come back tomorrow and take your money." In this way, one has to waste three days to get one day's wage. Where will you get the money to feed your family for the next two days? In the Developmentalism, State Power, and Local Politics

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town, the wages are better, and you get paid in cash, so you can buy provisions for your family. For this reason, people don't like to work in the village. Anil narrated this by exaggerating and mimicking the statements about "your aunt" and "your grandma" to the amusement of his listeners. 3o He deliberately used these terms to indicate how weak the excuses were for nonpayment. In most labor-hiring households, women were unlikely to have controlled the supply of cash or the access to it. The frustration of working hard and not being paid on time struck a familiar chord among the men present, all of whom, like Anil, were lower-caste laborers. Another group of lower-caste men told me that laborers especially disliked working for the thakurs because, they claimed, the thakurs had a habit of not paying workers promptly. This used to be a common practice and had declined to some degree so that the situation was better, but the worker always faced uncertainty. "Earlier, if they came to get us, we had to go because they were so powerful. Now at least we can refuse if we don't want to go [work for them]."3! At the time of this conversation in the last week oOuly 1989, there was frantic construction activity going on in Alipur as the village pond was being widened and deepened under a government program for village development. Tens of laborers had been hired for this job, but none of them was from Alipur. When I asked this group of lower-caste men, who made a living entirely from wage labor, why they were not working on this project, they said that they were all already committed to some other jobs which they did not want to leave. Most of the young men preferred to work in Delhi and had permanently left the village. Some worked in the nearby town of Mandi, where, depending on the kind of work, they earned Rs 20 or Rs 22 for a day's labor. Some jobs required more skill and thus commanded higher wages. I wanted to know why they would choose to go all the way to town when, after subtracting for transportation costs (Rs 4), they could get the same wage in the village. They agreed that wage rates were about the same but claimed that work was not always available in the village. Ram Singh, the unsuccessful candidate for headman, told me that the real reason that the younger generation preferred to work in the towns was because they could not tolerate working for the thakurs. Work on the village pond, for example, although financed by the government, was being allocated by Sher Singh in his capacity as headman. Getting a job in town may have meant freedom from local oppressions, but it also required living away from 138

Postcolonial Developments

the village, thus removing these mostly young men from the village political scene. The breakdown of forms of authority and deference that characterized a system of patronage in which laborers were dependent on landlords was due both to the changing means of production introduced by the green revolution and to the new opportunities for landless laborers to seek employment outside the village. Yet patronage did offer some security, however unequally it was institutionalized; therefore, the breakdown of patronage might have been expected to be accompanied by increased proletarianization. If by proletarianization we mean the growth of wage labor, then it was certainly true, as former tenants and farm servants become wage laborers.32 But if by that we mean the growth of landless laborers, then this proposition is dubious and may even be false (K. Bardhan 1977). At first sight, the simultaneous growth of wage labor with landownership may appear counterintuitive. Understanding this phenomenon, however, gives us some vital insights into the nature of rural politics. One can locate three broad causes of proletarianization (Byres 1982). Traditional village service castes had been displaced from their hereditary occupations, both because the changing methods of production no longer required certain tools and skills and because industrial goods had replaced their products (Berreman 1972; Appadurai 1989). "Development" in the form of the green revolution and consumer goods brought with it the displacement of certain kinds of labor. The dhimars (water carriers) of Alipur became tenants and petty shopkeepers because the introduction of tube wells and the abandonment of the village well made their occupation superfluous. Similarly, all but one person from the teli (oil presser) caste had abandoned their hereditary occupation because people preferred to take their mustard seed to town and have oil extracted by the cheaper, more efficient mechanical press. By 1984, none of Alipur's service caste households relied exclUSively on their traditional occupation, and less than a handful practiced them as a secondary source of income. They had all become primarily wage laborers. Another cause of proletarianization, directly connected to the decline of tenancy, stemmed from the increased profitability of agriculture (Byres 1982). Owners reclaimed land formerly leased to tenants for their own use. As green revolution technology had already been employed in Alipur for several years when I reached there in 1984, I did not witness this process. The low rates of tenancy I found may, in fact, have indicated that redemption had thoroughly run its course. Developmentalism, State Power, and Local Politics

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The final cause of proletarianization was the fragmentation and subdivision of landholdings as a result of the coparcenary system of inheritance. In this system, all the sons received an equal share of the property.33 When a family'S landholdings were split into several fragments, as they often were (on an average, there were 1.9 fragments per household), each son did not inherit one plot but a share of each of them. In this way, poor and middle peasants and sometimes rich peasants as well were reduced to marginal landholders in the course of one generation and were forced to enter the wage labor market. 34 This was one of the mechanisms by which landownership coexisted with proletarianization. Proletarianization was essentially Janus-faced: the other side to self-assertion and the growth of a class-based critique was increasing immiserization, marginalization, and victimization. 35 The process by which landowners were driven to the status of marginal peasants, however, formed only half the picture. The other half concerned the rural landless who had gained some land and, thus, become marginal peasants. Some of these people were service castes who had lost their niche, others were tenants who had been evicted, and still others had always been landless laborers. I will discuss how the landless managed to obtain some land in the next section. To avoid terminological confusion, I will henceforth not refer to these people as "proletarians with land" (which appears oxymoronic) but as "the rural semiproletariat." To understand this phenomenon better, the following categories need to be kept distinct: rural semiproletariat, rural landless, agricultural laborers, and wage laborers. The relation between them, as I see it, can be illustrated by the tree in Figure 7. I have drawn only half of the whole tree-it can be followed identically for landholding semiproletarians. I think of these categories as jointly exhaustive but not mutually exclusive, except for the landholding/landless category, which is both. The chief political implication of the proletarianization of the rural poor is to foster a new kind of dependence on village elites. The marginalization of semiproletarians is also true in a literal sense: their land is marginal both in terms of the size of the holding and in terms of its location-its distance from the settlement and from sources of irrigation. It is often also marginal in terms of soil quality. A pair of bullocks or a tractor is needed for plowing and sowing, a tube well for irrigation, and a thresher for cleaning the grain. Because the capital investment necessary for purchasing these machines is not justified by the size of the plot (and is, in any case, beyond their resources), the poor have to 140

Postcolonial Developments

Rural lower classes

I

I

Semiproletarians or landholders

I

Proletarians or landless

I

rl- - - - - L - - - - - - - -1

Tenants

Wage laborers

I

I

I

Artisans or rural industrial workers

Agricultural laborers

I

I

Casual and contract laborers

I

Permanent laborers

Figure 7. Categories of Rural Lower-Class People

rent these machines from upper-class peasants. The new high-yielding varieties are very sensitive to the timing of inputs: a two-week delay in irrigation when the winter wheat is ripening could mean a substantial loss of output. It is, therefore, not merely a question of access but of timely access, and in that sense, the poor are totally dependent on their upper-class suppliers. One might wonder, then, why semiproletarians would cultivate their own plots at all. Given the uncertainty and seasonable variability of employment, every contribution to subsistence was necessary.36 An important political consequence of retaining a toehold in cultivation was that the rural poor were co-opted into peasant movements which sought, for example, to increase subsidies for fertilizers and irrigation but which primarily benefited rich peasants. 37 Similarly, the status derived from being a landowner may have contributed to making a large proportion of proletarianization invisible in the compilation of official statistics. I found that even marginal peasants whose main source of income was wage labor invariably responded to queries about their primary occupation with kheti (farming) rather than majdoori (agriculturallabor) .

Development Programs and the Green Revolution

Instead of a straightforward story of capitalist expansion in which growing stratification resulted in a polarization between an increasingly Developmentalism, State Power, and Local Politics

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more prosperous class of capitalist farmers and larger numbers of rural landless, the green revolution in Alipur saw the rise of a category of people who were primarily wage laborers but who gained possession of tiny plots of land. How did this come about? What was the relationship between this pattern of landownership and the development policies of the postcolonial state? How did agrarian populism affect the types of government programs that were implemented? What effects did this have on relationships in the village? In this section I explore some of the reasons for and consequences of land redistribution. An understanding of this phenomenon has to begin with the wider context of Indira Gandhi's populism that I described in Chapter 1. Agrarian populism was partially a response to the increasing inequality accompanying the spread of the green revolution. 38 During the early seventies, the government introduced a series of subsidies and handouts oriented toward production but with essentially welfarist objectives. Targeted at small and marginal farmers, these consisted of small amounts of free seed, fertilizer, favorable credit for agricultural investment, and so forth and were administered by such new bureaucracies as the Small Farmers Development Agency (SFDA) and the agency for Marginal Farmers and Agricultural Laborers (MFAL). In the decade before the introduction of the green revolution, some legal changes were put into effect to protect tenants and to break up large estates through stipulating the maximum amount of land that an individual could own, called a "land ceiling. "39 In the particular context of the simultaneous growth of capitalist agriculture and government programs, these laws were to have unintended consequences. On the one hand, the suddenly increased profitability of agriculture made cultivation by owners more attractive, and the new laws gave landowners a justification for not renewing tenant leases. The land ceiling, on the other hand, though seemingly at odds with the drive to accumulate, merely encouraged the legal (although seldom the operational) subdivision of property. Increased yields meant that profits could be raised without necessarily cultivating more land; and when land was purchased, it could be legally registered in the name of a family member of the cultivator. At the village level, the effects of these changes were felt in two distinct ways. As mentioned above, the decline of tenancy and the increasing reliance on wage labor led to further class polarization. The joint impact of development programs targeted to small farmers and land ceiling laws can best be illustrated by an example. During my first 142

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round of fieldwork, the headman Prasad was the eldest brother of a joint family with a fairly substantial plot of fertile land. Legally, the land had been equally divided among the brothers;40 as a consequence, each of them was technically a "small farmer." Prasad proudly told me what a good strategy that had been. As headman, he naturally had extensive social and official networks among the government bureaucrats responsible for programs for small farmers. He made full use of these contacts, seldom losing an opportunity to gather free inputs for himself and the rest of his family of small farmers. If there were allocations still left over, he would direct them to other close friends and kinsmen, almost all of whom were, like him, prosperous capitalist farmers. Programs for small farmers were one part of the government strategy to bring development to the rural population. These programs could be placed alongside the establishment of other institutions, such as hospitals, credit cooperatives, fertilizer and seed stores, banks, creches, ration shops, police stations, grain and sugarcane purchaSing centers, and, perhaps most important, schools and colleges in rural areas. Another strategy of development consisted of building infrastructure in rural areas, for example, electric connections, roads, transportation and communication facilities, canals, housing, and so forthY These efforts were critical for legitimation purposes because they provided jobs. Although the actual numbers of people thus employed were small, they acquired greater significance because of the number of people each government employee actually supported. 42 Further, perhaps more significant than the number of jobs created was the promise of job opportunities for an even larger number of people, particularly for the potentially troublesome group of educated, unemployed youth. It is doubtful, however, that the direct and indirect accounting of heads in this way goes very far in explaining the legitimizing role of state institutions. Rather, their importance may lie in having usurped, reinvigorated, and enlarged the old patrimonial ethic of "looking after the little folk" through the provision of services. In the case of educational institutions, these services were accompanied by a conspicuously nationalist agenda. Populism added a distinctive twist to the state's developmentalist agenda. Electoral pressures have always pushed dominant groups to seek support from the numerically populous lower classes. This has taken the form of a multitude of special programs aimed at the so-called Scheduled Castes (scs): reservations in government jobs, heavily subsidized credit for the purchase of productive inputs, distribution of small Developmentalism, State Power, and Local Politics

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quantities of public land, subsidies for schooling,43 food for work programs, free electric connections, and so on. Most of these programs operated within the institutional and infrastructural bureaucracies outlined above, but some of them were administered by special bureaucracies set up explicitly for that purpose. In her bid to obtain the support of lower castes and classes, Indira Gandhi bypassed the Congress Party machinery and attempted to tie those voters to her regime directly. Her ability to do so depended on the processes that had gradually weakened property-based ties of patronage described in this chapter, on the vigorous promotion of an ideology of "social justice" captured in her election slogan, and on a renewed emphasis on the implementation of laws against discrimination that had long been on the books. In Chapter 1, I presented some evidence for the "reception" of Indira Gandhi's populist messages in Alipur. But what was it about village social relations and discourses that had been altered to enable populism to succeed? So far, I have suggested that the two crucial elements of this story had been lower-caste assertiveness and the demise of patronage: I will now add a third element, which is the role played by state development programs. This role can best be illustrated by the example of the manager of the state farm on which I stayed while doing fieldwork in Alipur. He was a lower-level, Class 3 employee of the UP state government. He had obtained the job by paying a small sum of money to a self-appointed "leader" [netaal, a broker who used his contacts with a lower-caste minister in the state government to obtain jobs for educated but unemployed lower-caste youth. Although he was a minor figure in a huge government bureaucracy, the Manager (as he was commonly called) effectively had complete control over the farm's substantial resources. The state farm itself was splintered into three fragments. While the main segment, which contained the farmhouse where the Manager lived, lay on the periphery of the village, two of the smaller fragments were situated on the side where most of the fields were owned by thakurs. 44 The Manager, therefore, came into contact with the thakurs in the course of his work. For their part, they were eager to make friends with him so as to be able to utilize, on the basis of "friendship" (that is, without payment), some of the equipment owned by the state farm. For example, several of the bigger landowners often borrowed the farm's tractor and tractor trolley. The Manager, for his part, understood perfectly well why they wanted to make friends with him. He utilized the opportunity offered by the necessarily frequent social visits of the higher-caste thakurs to assert his symbolic and social equality. As a 144

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thakur told me (referring to the Manager): "As soon as he sees me at the gate (which was at some distance from the house), he orders his wife to make tea. Frankly, every time I drink tea at his place, I get blisters on my tongue." That this man nevertheless went regularly to the Manager's house and defiled his personhood in drinking polluting cups of tea (symptomized by the blisters) spoke to the immense transformations flowing from the intersection of development programs with relations of production. This case was interesting because it demonstrated how the development programs launched by the state as part of its legitimizing efforts intertwined with the growing assertiveness of lower-caste and lowerclass people. The Manager, like other low-level bureaucrats, acted as a patron, using his position as an officer of the state to "help" his own people. Most of the daily laborers that he hired (at state-stipulated wages, which were above the prevailing market rates) were people of his own caste. At the same time that he employed the resources of the farm for his own ends, however, he also served the purposes of the state. Although the lower-caste clients that he hired were grateful to him for providing them jobs, the significance of the fact that it was the long arm of the state that lay behind the Manager was not lost on them. They knew very well who he worked for, where their wages were coming from, and why he had attained such a "good" position. He was a lowercaste person like them, and both he and they had benefited from state development programs. Pointing to the intersection of regime and lower-caste interests, however, does not completely explain why populist programs and policies have succeeded. We have to ask why rural upper classes supported such programs. At the very least, we have to account for why they did not oppose development programs aimed at lower-caste, lower-class people. Any understanding of upper-class support for populist programs targeted at lower castes and classes has to focus on one crucial aspect of development programs. This is what is euphemistically referred to as the "leakage" of funds: corruption. 45 Institutional and infrastructural programs usually differ in this regard in that the former provide small and regular opportunities for "leakage," whereas the latter mostly provide large and singular opportunities. Together with the fact that "finance has been a major constraint" (Bardhan 1984A) in funding these programs and that there is thus never a substantial enough sum of "leakage" to go around, I think we can locate here one of the most fundamental shifts in the political function of local-level leaders. That Developmentalism, State Power, and Local Politics

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shift is the move from patronage to brokerage, a move that underlay the changing basis of the reproduction of relations of domination at the village level.46 Village leaders no longer cultivated clients chiefly through the use of their own property-by leasing it to tenants, by employing an unchanging group of laborers, and so forth (that is, by acting as a patron) but rather by facilitating the delivery of state programs and services (that is, by acting as a broker). The centrality of brokerage was well illustrated by the polities of Alipur. Although Prasad was a rich farmer, he was not as wealthy and domineering as Sher Singh and certainly would not have been able to become headman in a scenario in which patronage was all important. He had used his position to disperse benefits from development programs to friends and supporters, highercaste as well as lower-caste. In the bargain, he had accumulated a fair amount of capital that he invested in agricultural machinery and the education of his younger brothers. Prasad looked back on his tenure as headman as a period in which the landless were the greatest beneficiaries. He took all the wasteland (usar land) in the control of the village panchayat and distributed it among lower-caste, landless people. According to Prasad, in the first round of land redistribution in 1983, he made thirty-six plots; he then created an additional forty-nine plots in 1987 (see also Wadley 1994:189-90).47 This was the year before new elections were to be held for headman. The chief beneficiaries of the first round were the odhs, who had helped elect him and whose houses in the village were adjacent to his. In the second round, he claimed to have distributed plots chiefly to harijans who had, in fact, voted for Sher Singh. The land that he distributed in the second round had been "improved" by the Land Reclamation Department, which had spent over Rs 1lakh (Rs 100,000) to level the land and construct irrigation and drainage channels. Prasad claimed that he chose not to divide up the land into plots that were too small to be useful. He made plots that were at least four bighas (about two-thirds of an acre), usually six or eight bighas, and sometimes as large as ten bighas. Some families received as much as twenty bighas in this way, because he allocated plots of four bighas adjacent to one another to several members of the family. Prasad maintained that it was largely due to his actions that there were no landless families left in Alipur. "The landless are now in good shape," concluded Prasad, when I spoke with him in 1992. A new round of elections were coming up. "People are asking me to run again," Prasad told me. "All the eighty-five people

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to whom I distributed plots have been requesting me to contest [the electionl." Apart from distributing farmland, Prasad claimed to have allocated house plots to lower-caste people as well. But his glowing assessment of his own actions was disputed by Ram Singh, Prasad's choice for headman in the elections after the last round of land redistribution. Ram Singh sarcastically noted: You don't make zamindars by giving people a small piece of waste [kallarl land. The thakurs opposed the land distribution, hoping that when they captured the headmanship, they would be able to distribute it to the very same people [that Prasad gave it tol and make money out of it. The fact is that from the poor the headman Prasad stole money, Sher Singh stole money, and if a third person becomes headman, he too will steal money [khaa raho ho I. Everybody steals from the poor. From Ram Singh's perspective, there was little difference between Prasad and Sher Singh, because both were interested primarily in lining their own pockets rather than genuinely doing something for the landless. Ram Singh continued: That land does not yield any output even if you put water [and other inputsl. There is so much deception [gaddaril going on. They don't allow plots to be registered, just keep the paperwork unofficial. That is the difference between unofficial [kachchal work and official [paccal work. They have made it a business. Where one plot should have been allocated, they made six. That land has no value, it is just wasteland. The poor don't have the means to cultivate the land. To obtain water, they have to buy it from somewhere; to plow the land, they need to find a person with a tractor. There's no profit in those plots. Having seen several pieces of wasteland that had been rehabilitated by the arduous labor of their owners, I was skeptical of Ram Singh's claim and challenged him. But he held firm in his conviction: ''This is the kind ofland where even grass doesn't grow; how can grain grow there?" Although Ram Singh's general sentiments about the role of uppercaste leaders were soundly endorsed by another group of lower-caste men to whom I spoke, they directly contradicted his assertion that wasteland could not be rehabilitated. The plots that Prasad had dis-

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tributed were not useless. Why, then, did people not choose to reelect Prasad or to elect someone that he had put up for the election? The explanation they offered was that lower-caste people voted for Sher Singh because "it is a herd mentality. Once one person decides to vote a certain way, they all decide to do the same. Once a person says, 'I'll vote for you,' he will vote for that candidate no matter what he stands for. It's an illiterate society [unpadh samaaj}. The candidates fool the people by promising them all kinds of things, then they forget it all afterward. These are just means to fool people." The "things" that were promised by Sher Singh were house plots, because everyone knew that there was no more farmland available for redistribution. They implied that the distribution of farmland was in any case no longer such an urgent priority: "With the exception of a few families, everyone now has a little bit of land. There is no family without some land. It is true that many of the new plots are on infertile land, but after working on them for two or three years, one can start planting them. They have to be leveled, lots of organic manure has to be applied, and only then are they fit for farming. The plots are small, just four to six bighas."48 I wanted to know if those plots were adequate to live on. "No," came the reply. "One has to do wage work in addition [to farming}." Sanwa was a relative of Ram Singh who had been elected to represent their hamlet in the village council. He claimed that Sher Singh approached him to endorse the drawing of several new plots. Sanwa knew that Sher Singh had already taken Rs 6,000 from several individuals to demarcate these plots and had accumulated the substantial sum of Rs 20,000 in bribes. In addition, a couple of wealthy jat peasants were eyeing some property that belonged to the village panchayat and had already paid off Sher Singh to get rights to those plots. So Sanwa refused to sign the register to indicate that the village council had met and approved the partitioning of new plots. He told me that as a matter of principle, he did not sign the register when he thought Sher Singh was doing the wrong thing, and only endorsed those proposals that he thought would benefit the whole village. In July 1989, at the time this conversation with Sanwa took place, fresh national elections were imminent. The Rajiv Gandhi regime was desperately trying to woo voters in rural areas by seeking to reinvigorate rural development programs. Several new schemes for rural development had been launched, the most ambitious of which was the Jawahar Employment Guarantee Scheme Oawahar Rojgaar Yojana, or JRY). In addition, there were programs to build houses for the indigent and 148

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lower-caste people in every village. In a bold departure from previous government programs, these new schemes handed over large sums directly to the elected village headmen rather than disburse them through development bureaucracies. The logiC was that this would prevent corrupt bureaucrats from siphoning off most of the money intended for rural development programs. On a hot and humid day in July, I was sitting and chatting with three men, two of them from middle castes and one from a lower caste. Sher Singh was passing by and, in response to a question from me about new government programs, mentioned that five new houses were to be constructed for harijans and ten for other "weaker sections."49 In addition, two new houses were to be constructed under the JRY. Sher Singh told us that he had heard that the regime had an ambitious scheme to build as many as fifty new brick [puccal houses in each village. He dismissed it as a gimmick to purchase votes in the upcoming elections. We went on to discuss other topics, including the change in the manner in which government moneys were being disbursed. Sher Singh said, "This government has been very good for the health of headmen [sarhaar nay pradhano hi sehat banaa deel." He was obviously referring to the newfound opportunities to divert some of the money from government schemes to his own pocket. The jat who was Sitting there at once criticized Sher Singh for seeking his own profit at the expense of the villagers. Sher Singh defended himself: "This is a matter of one's intelligence. When there are fools around, the intelligent ones profit." "The only fools," came the retort, "are the people who elected a useless fellow like you." There followed a heated exchange of words in which accusations were freely traded. "I would be a fool," said Sher Singh, "if I paid everyone from the district to the block level and did not make some money for myself. 50 It is not I but the administration that forces people to be dishonest [machaaril. When I have to payoff so much money to those above me, how can I get anything done [without diverting fundsl?" Sher Singh's open admission clearly indicated the shifting contours of village power. Populist programs for redistribution of land, creation of jobs for the unemployed, and construction of houses for the poor and lowest castes had resulted in new opportunities for the large-scale diversion of funds. It was easy to understand why the rural upper classes had readily shifted their activities from patronage to brokerage: the "fees" to be collected as brokers for development programs were a surer, quicker, and often more substantial source of surplus than the straightforward Developmentalism, State Power, and Local Politics

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expansion of their agricultural operations. The two activities were, in any case, not exclusive, and funds derived from one were, quite literally, plowed into the other. The shift from patronage to brokerage helps explain why the fact of thakur dominance of Alipur should not be interpreted too literally. The steady progression of control from the zamindar to Sukhi Singh to his nephew Sher Singh perhaps conceals more than it reveals. Not only had the bases on which dominance rested shifted, but there had also been profound changes in the legitimacy and "naturalness" of class and caste privilege. Relations of production that hinged on the social ties between landlords and tenants had given way to a class of capitalist farmers and wage laborers. However, wage laborers did not become pure proletarians, divorced from all means of production. Populist policies in a competitive electoral system resulted in the distribution of small plots of marginal land to poor, lower-caste, and landless groups. Politically, the redistribution of these small plots was significant. It bound lowercaste and poor people into quasi-clientist relations with the rural upper classes, as they were dependent on these upper classes for all the means that were necessary to make plots agriculturally viable, especially for irrigation water and tractors or bullocks for plowing. 51 If poor and lower-caste people were bound to the wealthy for inputs crucial to farming, however, upper-class leaders were also dependent on lower-class, lower-caste people for their own positions. Sher Singh explicitly acknowledged what was common wisdom: that the profits to be made from the delivery of development services had become the chief source of surpluses for village leaders. But, apart from serving as a source of revenue, such a dependence also implied a commitment to the ideologies of caste and class equality, because that was the rhetoric with which these programs were justified. 52 This process was clearly visible in the state and central elections that were held in 1984, when several of the village elites went to work for their candidates. A thakur who was especially preoccupied with his caste status told me that the most distasteful thing about campaigning was that when he accompanied his candidate to lower-caste sections of villages, people would be standing in front of their houses with cups of tea. To demonstrate their sincerity, the canvassers would have to take a sip and thus publicly "humiliate" themselves for the sake of votes. That this man should have continued to court lower-caste voters, despite feeling quite intensely about food pollution, said a great deal about the importance of electoral politics and, by extension, of the competition for the "rewards" of public office. 150

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Because funds for development programs were limited, it resulted in intense upper-class rivalry for the support of lower-class and lowercaste followers. This was clear in the struggle between Prasad and Sher Singh for the position of headman. Programs aimed at lower-caste and poor people, integral to the project of developing a modem nation, were intended to achieve economic and social development. These programs accompanied the statesponsored stimulus given to agrarian capitalism by the introduction of new agricultural technologies and subsidies that helped launch the green revolution in north India. Next, I will draw out some of the larger implications of the articulation of new agricultural technologies and state development programs in local politics.

Conclusion

In the previous chapter I demonstrated the importance of the green revolution and agrarian populism in the development strategies of the postcolonial state. In this chapter I have tried to show how the nationalist project of developing a modem agricultural sector intersected with populist policies to shape local politics and the everyday lives of people in one northern Indian village. The boost given to resource-intensive, capitalist agriculture by state policies resulted in a sharper cleavage between landowners and laborers. Landowners in Alipur who were net hirers of labor always complained that wage rates were rising much faster than the cost of other goods and commodities; laborers grumbled that wages were inadequate and that it was difficult to sustain, feed, and clothe their families at prevailing wage rates. On the other hand, state policies had also resulted in the redistribution of marginal land to the landless, so that "almost everyone" in Alipur had some small quantity of land (Wadley 1994:71,213). This had the effect of weakening class antagonisms not only because it promoted relations of quasi-clientism, as stated above, but also because the owners of these small plots gained a stake in the subsidies that sustained the green revolution. Input subsidies for fertilizer, the electricity that powered tube wells, and seed benefited marginal farmers as well as big ones. Therefore, antistate farmers movements to preserve these subsidies, like that launched by the Kisan Union, had the potential to incorporate small and marginal farmers in addition to the surplus-producing peasant. Lower-caste people also benefited from development programs that sought to bring "development" to them, such as those that aimed at Developmentalism, State Power, and Local Politics

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providing housing, education, child care, production loans, and so on. These programs were important not only for the material benefits they delivered but perhaps even more for the changes they brought about in caste ideologies and opportunities for social mobility. Ram Singh, the lower-caste man who was defeated by Sher Singh in the election for headman, was reflecting on the changes that he had witnessed during his own lifetime. He felt that his grandchildren had much better prospects than he did as a child. There were schools in every village, whereas in his time, few people had their children educated. "In my days, there were barriers, people used to create difficulties for [lower-caste] children. Now, whatever they might feel inside, they don't say anything. When I was young, we [lower-caste children] could only study up to the first or second class. Those old things are now finished. They used to be extra strict with our children, so that discouraged them from studying. They didn't want our children to study. Now, whatever they may feel inside [payt may jo bhi ho], all children go to school." But Ram Singh also maintained that children of his caste had not been able to take advantage of government schemes set up to encourage them to be educated because the money that was allocated for that purpose was "eaten up" by upper-caste groups who controlled the educational system. Thus, at the same time that Ram Singh attributed better opportunities to the government, he also criticized it for its inability to implement its programs effectively. This criticism has to be seen in the light of the role that development has played in legitimizing postcolonial regimes. Discourses of development have been central to the postcolonial Indian state as part of larger strategies of decolonization and as a central strategy for building a modem nation. Colonialism was held responsible for the poverty of the country, that is, for its lack of development. Development programs, then, were mechanisms not only to bring economic and social progress but also to establish that national independence marked a complete break with colonialism and to launch the nation firmly on the path to modernity. Ram Singh delivered an eloquent critique of these premises: Whatever government schemes have been started to finish casteism [choot -achoot], it has been increasing rather than weakening. Casteism is increasing, not decreasing. People haven't been able to eliminate what is nested in their minds. Our [here Ram Singh was referring to the lower castes] people build these wonderful homes for the higher castes, but when the house is complete and the 152

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hearth is laid, then we can't go into the house-isn't this casteism? This sort of casteism [jaativaadl is very difficult to remove. This country will be completely independent only when casteism is terminated. Ram Singh's questioning of the country's independence clearly brought into doubt the claims to postcoloniality made by the state through its association with development. Nationalist efforts to build a postcolonial nation-state tied economic development to social and cultural "progress" by holding colonialism responsible for poverty and "social evils" such as untouchability. Efforts to initiate "development," therefore, were seen as ushering in an epoch in which the national society would gradually be rid of invidious distinctions based on caste and creed. This phenomenon, which can be termed "developmentalism," became the hegemonic state ideology because it was successfully incorporated into programs and institutions, as demonstrated in the discussion of agrarian populism in the previous chapter. But efforts to promote economic development through productivity-enhancing technologies such as the green revolution often worked at cross-purposes with attempts to bring "development" to the poor and lower castes. In this chapter I have tried to show the complex interconnections between state sponsorship of the new technology of agricultural production, which worked to exacerbate class divisions, and popUlist programs that sought to reduce those divisions. A close analysis of their articulation in the context of one village helps explain why certain ideologies of development have proved so successful, as well as why challenges to this discourse of postcoloniality continue to be mounted. The next chapter holds up practices of agriculture to a more finely grained analysis, highlighting other contestations of development and differing characterizations of the postcolonial condition.

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3 "Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy

D

uring my first spell of fieldwork in Alipur in 1984-85, a great proportion of my time was spent conducting a socioeconomic survey of agricultural production, covering the entire village in two rounds of detailed interviews. During the course of administering this intricate survey about farming practices, I noticed that there was a yawning gulf between the technoscientific language of the survey form, which had been adapted from similar surveys used by economists, and the idiom in which the villagers of Alipur represented their own farming practices (Appadurai n.d.). To gain a better appreciation of the epistemologies and practices of farming, I conducted a series of detailed interviews with people from different castes and classes. It was a sweltering June day in 1985, almost at the end of my fieldwork. The thermometer had consistently stayed above one hundred degrees Fahrenheit, for the previous two months. Even at 7 A.M., when I left the farmhouse and headed to the settlement to do my work, the sun already felt hot on the skin. It was a good time, however, to seek out farmers for interviews because agricultural work was pretty much at a standstill. To make full use of the little time that I had left, I interviewed people in the afternoon, when no one that I wanted to interview was likely to be busy. It was at such a time that I spoke with Suresh in the coolness of my room. Suresh was a small farmer (profiled in greater detail below) who was explaining to me why he had plowed the field in which he had planted maize only four times. This was quite unusual, for farmers in Alipur tried to plow a field six times or more in preparation for sowing. Suresh justified his decision, however, in the following terms: "Say we plow six or eight times. Then the soil will drink more water. If it drinks water, heat will come out of the ground, which will

appear to make the sapling yellowish. Thus the plant keeps sitting down there instead of shooting upward. It doesn't run upward. It just sinks into the earth and remains there as a twig. Underneath, its roots rot from the heat [bhabhkaal. If the field is plowed less, then it is profitable. Plowing many times automatically results in lower production." Because maize was sown just before the monsoons, the logic of the explanation is as follows: The ground had hardened over the hot summer months. When it was plowed, the soil was loosened up. The more it was plowed, the more water-retentive the soil became. Then when the rains came, the soil steamed because the water came into contact with earth that had been steadily heated over the dry summer months. This steam destroyed the roots of the plant and provided an environment far too hot and humid for the plant to grow. The plant's development was smothered by an environment that lacked the proper balance between moistness and heat. A smaller number of plowings, by contrast, dug up the weeds, brought them to the surface to dry, and also loosened the hard crust of the soil, which made it more porous and thus allowed rainwater to drain. Paradoxically, this enabled a better balance to be reached between moisture and heat because it did not trap the rainwater as effectively as did a well-plowed field. Like other farmers in Alipur, Suresh brought an "indigenously" developed knowledge of agronomy to bear on an agricultural practice conducted largely with chemical fertilizers, electric tube wells, and "scientifically" bred hybrid seeds. When farmers in Alipur talked about wheat varieties, the names Number 2204, Number 2009, RR21, Sona, Kisan, Wonderful, and K68 rolled off their tongues. Although hybrid varieties of other crops also existed and were used in the area, it was the high-yielding varieties of wheat that were most widely adopted. Not only were the varietals themselves the product of bioscience, but so too was the entire technology of production. It thus surprised me to learn that bioscientific terminology played a relatively minor role in the discourses of Alipur's farmers. Their vocabularies of agriculture bore little resemblance to the "scientific" discourse that had given birth to the technologies which they employed in farming. This is not to say that bioscientific terms and explanations were entirely absent in Alipur. They were incorporated in a variety of creative ways in the agronomical discourse of farmers. But "scientific" explanations made up only one portion of agricultural "talk" and agricultural practices. Most of what farmers had to say about agriculture was expressed in a different discourse comprised of a "humoral" agronomy. This was true both in "Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy 155

Children bathing near tube well

their conversations with one another and in the interviews I conducted with them. Such alternative epistemologies of agriculture and natural resources have usually been called "indigenous knowledge" in the scholarly literature. In this chapter I explore what it might mean to characterize the agronomical terminology, knowledges, and practices of Alipur's farmers as "indigenous." How does one theorize a condition in which disparate epistemologies and practices coexist and interpenetrate with such disarming ease? The farmers of Alipur, aggressively utilizing hybrid seeds, biochemical inputs, tube well technology, and state institutions, hardly correspond to depictions of "the traditional farmer." At the same time, they are not "essentially the same" as farmers in the United States or Europe. Where, then, does the difference lie? What makes these "modern" farmers distinctive? More broadly, is there something that these farmers can teach us about the different modalities of experiencing modernity in the postcolonial world? Some of the answers have already been hinted at in the first two chapters. Here, I extend the insights into social and political location offered earlier by considering the epistemology of agronomy and the practice of farming. A detailed consideration of knowledges of agronomy and the practices of farming raises several difficult theoretical questions that run 156

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through this chapter. One of the chief problems is representing the inventive and contentious use of disparate and incommensurable discourses of agriculture without "cleaning them up," that is, eliminating their messiness. Farmers in Alipur often used discourses regarding the health of plants, which relied on a theory about a proper balance of humors-that is, elements that were hot, cold, dry, and moist. The balance of humors depended on the constitution of a plant, which depended on its intrinsic properties but also on the properties of the soil, fertilizers, water, and wind with which it came into contact. All these inputs conveyed their properties to the plant, which in turn conveyed its properties to humans when ingested as food. As I demonstrate very clearly, however, humoral explanations were not the only ones employed by farmers. "Scientific" theories of agronomy were freely interspersed with humoral ones in debates about agricultural issues, and when one examined practices, the situation became even more complicated. Farmers' explanations of agricultural practices interwove references to the politics of caste, class, and gender with theories of agronomy. What was one to make of a situation in which the discourses of development promulgated by a modern nation-state and a substantivist theory of plant life intermingled with seeming effortlessness? Was there something specifically "postcolonial" about these unexpected intersections? In this chapter I employ an analysis of the epistemologies and practices of agriculture to delineate the hybridities that characterize the postcolonial condition. In particular, problematizing indigenous knowledges of agronomy enables me to demonstrate how the binaries of modernity-colonial and national-are destabilized by postcoloniality. Alipur's farmers neither fit the mold of indigenous people who have been uncontaminated by modernity nor that of progressive farmers on the brink of entering the takeoff stage of capitalist development. As such, they render ambivalent narratives of progress and modernity embedded in postcolonial discourses of development. They participated enthusiastically in green revolution agriculture, yet much of the time they employed a discourse of farming that was quite strikingly at odds with a bioscientific understanding of agriculture. At the same time, humoral understandings of agronomy constituted only one part of explanations and justifications given for particular agricultural decisions. Practices of farming were explained in terms of the relationship between humoral explanations of agronomy, local politics, development projects and programs, and the politics of household and caste. The destabilizing "Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy 157

implications of postcoloniality for the identity of subjects of a modem nation-state become especially clear through such a lens, as farmers in Alipur failed to conform to the developmentalist vision of the citizens of a modem nation. The necessarily condensed argument in this paragraph will become clearer as it is illustrated through the detailed empirical material that follows. Before doing that, however, I wish to explain why I have chosen to use the notion of humoral agronomy rather than indigenous knowledge to characterize farmers' discourses of agriculture. My discomfort in labeling hybrid understandings of agriculture as indigenous led me to the more specific and delimited concept of humoral agronomy. But while it does result in greater precision and clarity, the notion of humoral agronomy does not eliminate some of the questions that haunt "the indigenous." A brief consideration of these questions must begin with the relationship between humoral theories of agronomy and Ayurveda, a classical Indian system of medicine. 1 In an influential book, Zimmermann (1987) has argued that a structural distinction between jangala, the dry, grassy, savanna-type lands, and anupa, the moist, unctuous, marshy lands, lies at the basis of Ayurvedic classifications of land, fauna, flora, and human health. This "ecological" theme is then shown to run through Hindu medicine as a system of oppositions that motivates the classification of flora and fauna, of diseases, of body types, and of treatment. While such an exercise, built on the close reading of three ancient texts that date from the beginning of the common era to the seventh century, is undoubtedly valuable, it begs the question of the relationship of a classificatory system adumbrated in a few "great" books with the activities of practitioners across the centuries. As Obeyesekere (1991) has pointed out in a perceptive review article, a virtuoso structuralism cannot bridge the gap between the text and the world, and to posit Ayurveda as a transhistorical system is to reassert precisely those Orientalist reifications that so much of contemporary critical theory has helped take apart. The problem I have in reading the traces of a great textual tradition in present practices is that no evidence is ever offered of the mechanisms that translated those texts into practices and then preserved the entire system or elements of it intact over centuries. If the duality between jangala and anupa animated the agronomical theories that I encountered in Alipur, for example, peasants certainly presented no evidence of it in their discussions and practices. Even if one were to consider not the Ayurveda of the ancient Hindu texts but the syncretic, hybrid version that is the legacy of the nine158

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teenth century, which "took over Western ideas of physiology and anat0my and translated them in Ayurvedic terms" (Obeyesekere 1991A23), how would a theory of medicine concerning the human body be translated to plant life? Clearly, there were parallels between the notion that the good health of plants consisted of the proper balance of heat and wetness and the Ayurvedic analysis of the body as a balance of "humors."2 But if the tripartite division between dosas, dhaatus, and rna las (usually translated as humors, tissue or substance, and excreta, respectively) is central to the Ayurvedic understanding of the human body, I found farmers in Alipur employing no parallel explanation in referring to the health of plants. The closest that knowledges of agronomy got to this threefold division was in its parallels to the concept of the three dosas (called vaayu, pitta, and kapha, which are loosely translated as wind, bile, and phlegm, respectively); but even here, there was no literal correspondence between these terms and ideas of "hotness" and "wetness" used to describe the health of plants. 3 Thus, the notion that the understanding of the health of plants was analogical to "indigenous" explanations of human health should not be taken too literally. If peasant understandings and explanations of farming were not merely a "corrupted" form of Ayurveda, where did they Originate? Was there a "system" of "indigenous" agronomy that, while impervious to its users, could nevertheless be reconstructed by the analyst? I take it as axiomatic that originary systems of agronomy are not recuperable from an examination of current practices and discourses. After a quarter of a century of scientific, green revolution agriculture and at least a century of "modern" farming spanning independence and colonial rule, "indigenous" agricultural practices and agronomical theories form an ever receding trace on the horizon of the knowable. 4 It is this elusive quality that I wish to index in using the term "humoral," not some originary system of meaning. In contrasting humoral agronomy with "green revolution bioscience," I intend not as much to oppose "indigenous" knowledges to "scientific" ones but to pose existing, hybridized understandings of agriculture, themselves the outcome of multiple genealogies, against one, specific mode of agricultural practice, whose origin can be traced to the particular conditions of corporate agriculture in the United States in the twentieth century In this chapter, instead of searching for the Holy Grail of an indigenous system of agronomy, I have paid close attention to the practices and discourses of farmers in Alipur. In so doing, I have identified two features of farming that are often missed in structuralist analyses and in "Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy

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reconstructions of "indigenous knowledge." The first feature is the inescapable fact that agricultural understandings and practices are composed of disjunctive and incommensurably hybrid discourses, which I trace to the particular condition of postcolonial modernity. Second, discourses of agriculture are not a closed field of meaning and action but are profoundly shaped by the politics of caste, class, and gender differentiation. Using the analytic frame of postcolonial theory allows me to describe a very different practice of agriculture than has heretofore been the case. The material in this chapter draws on the surveys, my observations of farming and village life, and detailed interviews conducted during three rounds of fieldwork. My objective was to explore systematically what I had heard regarding knowledges of agronomy. For the purposes of exposition, I will concentrate on the affairs of three farmers whom I got to know quite well. I first met Suresh, the poorest of the three, a short, forty-two-year-old brahmin man with close-cropped hair and mischievous gray eyes, soon after I reached Alipur. He lived in a large cattle shed [gher] on the northern edge of the village. The oldest of his four children was a seventeen-year-old son, another son and a daughter were in their early teens, and there was a young girl of nine. Suresh was one of the few people in his generation to have obtained a formal education beyond high school. In one of the two little rooms in which his family lived, Suresh carefully preserved a picture that showed him among the graduating class at the technical institute, where he had trained to be a welder. He claimed to have moved back to the village, sacrificing a potentially financially rewarding career, because his presence was needed to manage the family farm. He had no regrets about his decision because he had heard that many welders eventually went blind at an early age; he felt that no amount of money could possibly compensate for the gift of sight given to us by God. Due to conflicts with his uncles, Suresh and his family had moved from their ancestral home in the center of the brahmin part of the village to their family's cattle shed, a large yard with high brick walls. There, in three small huts built in different comers around a huge neem [Azadirachta indica] tree in the center, lived the six family members with their six animals. The two cows old enough to give milk were, however, too emaciated to supply much. The family relied for their livelihood on income from their two-acre farm and Suresh's activities as the village priest. In the kharif harvest, or monsoon harvest, in 1984, Suresh had 160

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planted maize on one-third of an acre; bajra, or pearl millet, on about an acre; and jowar (a variety of barley) for fodder on the rest. The total yield was 200 kg of maize and 600 kg of pearl millet or, if one assumes a four-month growing season, about 1.1 kg/day for each member of the family. But because 200 kg of millet was sold, the grain left for consumption was reduced to less than 1 kg/person/day. In the rabi harvest, or winter harvest, they had grown three crops-a new variety of wheat, Number 2204, on just less than an acre; mustard on two-thirds of an acre; and barley on the remaining third. (This was considered the main harvest, and the yields were much higher.) The 1000 kg of wheat, 240 kg of mustard, and 280 kg of barley that were produced would have to feed the family up to at least late the next fall, when the monsoon crop would be harvested. Most of this harvest-all the mustard and barley and half the wheat-was sold to raise cash. The family's need for cash was more pressing than usual because loans incurred at the marriage of the older daughter needed to be paid back. Suresh even planted a mung crop on two-thirds of an acre that summer, but lack of water and a dearth of inputs resulted in a feeble yield. The fact that Suresh managed to sustain a good reputation in a strifetom little village such as Alipur was a testament to his tact and somewhat detached demeanor. 5 Of course, these qualities were also the result of economic necessity and political exigency. He had to stay above the hurly-burly of village politics and maintain good relations with all, especially the wealthy thakurs and jats, because the village was not large enough for him to earn a decent income from serving as priest for just one faction. At the same time, the marginality of his position as landowner and political actor was less likely to place him in structurally antagonistic relations with others. He had to speak carefully and (seem to) listen sympathetically to all groups. Appearing detached from worldly matters also conveniently played into Hindu notions of spiritual purity, an image that Suresh consciously aspired to cultivate. He did not farm, he claimed, because contact with the soil was contaminating and below the status of a true brahmin and because he wanted to keep himself away from worldly concerns. 6 Therefore, he left all the actual work to his sons and was content to supervise them. He spent most of his time reading the spiritual books that he ordered in the mail. Suresh was one of the two people I was closest to during the time that I spent in Alipur. His religiOUS training inclined him toward explanations framed in the "great tradition" of Hinduism, and his wish to impress me perhaps led him to frame things in "modem, scientific" terms. 7 "Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy

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This led to some interesting contradictions that Suresh bridged rather creatively. At the same time, he tended to evaluate village practices negatively-that is, as "undeveloped" and therefore inferior. The second example intensively employed in this chapter-that of Sompal Singh-converges in some regards with Suresh's situation but is different as well. As a thakur, Sompal was politically in the opposite camp and, for the most part, allied himself with the thakurs, "crossing over" mostly to go and talk to Suresh. Yet, he was friendly with at least one brahmin household and was on speaking terms with others (unlike, for example, the headman Sher Singh, who had no contact with most brahmin families). As in the case of Suresh, Sompal's ability to cross over was due to the combination of Sompal's tact and lack of political and economic muscle. 8 Although not poor by village standards, Sompal was one of the smaller landholders among the thakurs, owning just over four acres of relatively low-quality land near the village's western boundary. He did not own a tube well and was therefore dependent on Sher Singh (also a thakur) for irrigation water. Sompal preferred to rent out his own property and earn his living doing odd jobs. 9 He was very skillful in working with his hands, especially with mechanical equipment. Toward the end of my fieldwork in Alipur, Sompal was steadily employed at a state farm, being paid to do maintenance and installation work on the farm's new tube well. But his continued employment was jeopardized by the impending transfer of the manager who had become his good friend. It seemed likely that, as in the past, his family, consisting of his wife and four young children, would have to subsist on rent from their land and income from occasional employment. Because Sompal's family lacked their own source of fodder, they could not even afford to sell milk by keeping buffalo and cows. 10 The monsoon and winter harvests of 1984-85 saw Sompal take up farming for perhaps the first time after he had broken away from his father's household. But he did not farm his own land-that was rented out as usual. His father temporarily gave him ten bighas (approximately one and two-thirds acres) from his own plot on very favorable fixed terms. In the kharif harvest, Sompal planted four different crops on this land-maize on two-thirds of an acre, lentils on half an acre, oilseeds on a quarter of an acre, and fodder on another quarter of an acre. Lentils and fodder were grown for sale in the market, whereas maize and oilseeds [lahail were meant for domestic consumption. Sompal's inexperience was evident from the poor returns. The maize crop yielded an 162

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abysmal eighty kilograms or one-half man per bigha, which Sompal claimed resulted from improper sowing techniques. ll The same thing happened with the lentils, which were sown too close together; as a consequence, the lentil crop yielded a lot of wood but very little marketable output. The jowar, intended to be sold as a standing green fodder, found no purchasers because, according to Sompal, no one wanted to come daily into his father's property (which they would need to do to harvest it). During the rabi harvest, Sompal planted barley after clearing the maize plot, wheat on about half an acre, and a fodder calledjai (oats) on a quarter of an acre. He took a gamble by setting aside the rest-a quarter of an acre-for sugarcane. Because sugarcane takes approximately nine months to mature, he had hoped his father would allow him to keep the land for another year. But his father understood the ploy and refused to extend the lease. Since it was too late to plant anything else, Sompal then had no choice but to leave the area fallow. The yields from the rabi crop were also considerably short of spectacular. All of the barley and most of the wheat had to be paid as rent. Goats ate the fodder while it was still green. That left a net return of just 250 kilograms of wheat, which was not much for all the effort that had been required to farm. During my first round of fieldwork, I did not get to know Sompal well until he started working regularly on the state farm on which I happened to live. On subsequent visits, I came to know his whole family much better. At thirty-three, he was just a few years older than I was in 1984, and we instinctively hit it off. What struck me about Sompal was his ability at-I might even say expertise in-negotiating his way through the maze of village politics. He had mastered the art of ambiguity, agreeing without commitment, if the situation so required, to convey his disagreement and, on the appropriate occasions, disagreeing without sincerity to indicate his actual agreement. On the surface, no one could fault him for saying the wrong things or acting improperly. And yet, paradoxical as it may seem, he was amazingly sincere. He let you know exactly how he felt without ever stating it explicitly. Sompal had mastered the fine art of representing intention. He showed very clearly that in the interpretation of experience, the equivocal qualities of interpretation could also be utilized, although perhaps not equally, by those peripherally placed in the loci of power. Approximately twenty, Dhani Singh, the youngest of the three people whose voice informs this chapter, was the middle child of a jat family "Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy

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who had moved into the village within the last five years. They bought a substantial package of land, approximately seven acres split almost equally in two segments, just across the road on the eastern side of the village. In addition, in the year 1984-85, they had rented in two plots totaling three acres adjacent to their own. Although quite well off, Dhani Singh's family had been in a fair deal of trouble since they moved to Alipur. 12 Dhani Singh's elder brother was involved in at least two incidents that resulted in the village council subjecting him to the ultimate humiliation: being publicly beaten with a slipper by a woman. Toward the end of my stay, both the elder and the younger brother were, on separate occasions, hauled off to jail. The elder brother was a suspect in the theft of a tube well pump, and the younger brother had been caught redhanded trying to pick the pocket of a fellow villager. After his brother broke away from the family to manage his own share of the property independently, Dhani Singh assumed the main responsibility for the household farm. His father was too old and feeble to be of much help, and his younger brother preferred to spend his time in town.13 In the kharif harvest, they planted several crops in each of the four fragments, adding up to a total of nine separate plots. Half of all the land, owned as well as rented, was planted with maize. The rest was taken up by various kinds of fodder-pearl millet, jowar, and gwal. Like other farmers, Dhani Singh used almost no fertilizer or irrigation water during the kharif harvest. 14 The yields, although better than those of either Sompal or Suresh, were not very good (maize on all his plots yielded an average of 2-4 mans/bigha, approximately the villagewide average). Although the rented land required only a payment in kind at the end of the year, Dhani Singh agreed to a request from the owner to supply about 280 kilograms of maize and 80 kilograms of wheat immediately after the kharif harvest. This quantity would be deducted from the total owed, and the lower price of maize as compared with wheat made it profitable to supply as much maize as possible. The rabi harvest saw Dhani Singh adopting a very unusual strategy in planting wheat on all the land, both rented and owned. What was even more surprising was that most of the wheat he planted was the traditional, or desi, variety. In 1984, practically no one else in the village sowed traditional wheat anymore. 15 When I asked him why he chose to plant desi wheat instead of one of the new high-yielding varieties, he told me that the seed was the only type they had at home at the time, adding, with some pride, "We have not bought seed to this day." The yields on each plot were predictably poor, ranging from a low of 2.5 164

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mans/bigha to a high of about 4.0 mans/bigha. The "better" farmers, by comparison, achieved yields of 7 to 9 mans/bigha. Dhani Singh explained the poor yields by pointing out that he had been delayed in planting and harvesting the previous crop, that he lacked the resources to fertilize the land adequately, and that he could not supply enough water to the crop. Dhani Singh was not considered particularly intelligent by other people in the village. In fact, when I was attempting to set up an interview with him, a man of his own caste who prided himself on his farming skills asked me why I wanted to waste my time talking to someone who knew so little about agriculture. Several people told me that he had taken on more land than he could possibly handle and might have been better off trying to give adequate inputs to the land that he did own. Dhani Singh agreed with them, claiming that his family would not even recover the amount of grain that they owed for the lease. When the landlord had come begging to him to lease the land, he had flatly refused, but his father consented behind his back. The result was that they could not afford the inputs that were necessary to get a good output and hence their entire crop would suffer. Dhani Singh was not the best of respondents. Unlike other farmers that I interviewed, Dhani Singh seemed unsure of his own agricultural activities. It did not help that he was not terribly articulate and often could not explain what he meant. But he was always very friendly and often spent time gossiping with me, usually along with some other young men who did most of the talking. By the time I interviewed him, I had known him for a fairly long time; yet, I thought he appeared by turns uncertain and tentative and, as usual, reticent. Before turning to a detailed examination of the agricultural practices of the three farmers whose profiles are sketched above, I wish to articulate explicitly some of the theoretical problems surrounding the notion of "indigeneity." In the next section I attempt to position "the indigenous" by considering the genealogy and politics of this term. What is the difference between the discussion of "indigenousness" in the last two decades and the role that indigenousness played in colonial and nationalist discourses? What are the continuities between colonial and developmentalist uses of "the indigenous"? In the section that follows, I show that the relationship between "the modem" and "the indigenous" is intimately connected to the modernltradition dichotomy. The bulk of this chapter, however, is devoted to a close examination of "indigenous" knowledges of agronomy in Alipur. Although the theories of agronomy "Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy 165

used by farmers in Alipur depend heavily on a humoral logic, a consideration of agricultural practices shows that they are not simply the outcome of "indigenous" theory. I then show how a discussion of agronomy becomes even more complicated by considering the political context of agricultural practices. Finally, I attempt to delineate how "the indigenous" has been conceptualized in postcolonial theory and what insights such theories have to offer when analyzing agriculture in Alipur. Politics of ''the Indigenous"

The past decade has witnessed an explosion of interest, scholarly as well as popular, in "the indigenous." Indigenous peoples, indigenous knowledges, indigenous medical practices, and indigenous flora and fauna are the subjects of flourishing discourses among academics, aid agencies, environmentalists, entrepreneurs, biologists, multinational corporations, new-age spiritualists, and the medical establishment (and this is, no doubt, a partial list). Discourses of indigenousness are everywhere these days, yet the term seems to be employed in an extraordinarily loose way to refer to a large variety of phenomena in different locations. Instead of clearing away the confusions that surround the term, so as to reveal its "true" meaning, I will ask what enables the indigenous to represent such a disparate range of referents. In other words, why does "indigenousness" prove to be such a productive signifier? What makes it possible for a diverse range of objects and phenomena to be brought together under the label "indigenous"? What does it mean to speak of the indigenous after centuries of colonial rule and a much longer history of global exchange? Why have discourses on the indigenous flourished in the last two decades, at the very moment that global capitalism has entered a renewed phase of expansion and legitimacy? At the same time that I recognize its utility and support its deployment in conjunctural political projects initiated by and on behalf of disempowered and marginal groups, I wish to evaluate critically the recruitment of the indigenous as a theoretical construct. What could the notion of "indigenousness" possibly mean in the postcolonial, late-capitalist world, with the increased velocity of the circulation of commodities, services, finances, ideas, and images and its accompanying effect of time-space compression?16 Although I do not explicitly pursue this question, it lies in the background in much of what follows as I pursue the task of relocating the indigenous through the thickets of nationalist and postcolonial theory. My intent is to chart 166

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the role played by the idea of "indigenousness" in colonial and nationalist discourses in India to understand why it continues to be so important in the postcolonial world. Perhaps more important for my purposes is to ask how ideas of indigenousness find their way into postcolonial theory and what the difference is between postcolonial representations of the indigenous and those found in colonialist and nationalist theories in India. In this section I demonstrate the degree to which supposedly archaic attitudes to "the indigenous" suffuse present development practice. In so doing, I do not wish to imply that attitudes to the indigenous in development projects merely act to sustain colonialism by other means. There are several reasons for not equating dispositions to the indigenous in "development" and colonialism, not least that nationalism itself shares much with colonial positions toward the indigenous. It is difficult to explain why the indigenous has found such a receptive audience among national and transnational elites without tracing its connections to the role occupied by "native tradition" in colonial and nationalist imaginings. Another way to frame this problem is to pose the question of the relation between indigenous knowledges and the contemporary, latecapitalist world. It seems paradoxical that the surge of interest in the indigenous in the last two decades has accompanied the geographic expansion and restructuring of capitalist processes so that marginal groups in "isolated" areas are increasingly drawn into the circuits of capitalist production and consumption. This has happened in a variety of ways: through tourism, particularly ecotourism and "ethnic" tourism; through the continued search for raw materials such as timber, petroleum, and minerals; through the efforts to locate new gene plasms for agriculture, pesticides, and insecticides as environmental pressures mount on chemical agriculture; through the search for new raw materials for medicines by transnational drug companies; and through the encouragement given by Third World governments to various segments of the population to colonize the "low-density frontiers" of the nation. I do not for a moment wish to conflate what are in fact very different phenomena-a great deal separates "eco-marketing" from petroleum extraction, and it would be a mistake to suggest that the two phenomena have similar effects on the environment or on indigenous people. Although I do not pursue the relationship between capitalist expansion and the explosion of interest in the indigenous in what follows, I do wish to juxtapose those issues so as to stimulate some speculation about "Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy 167

their relationship. Let me anticipate the argument of this chapter and suggest that for a wide variety of reasons, ranging from the struggles launched by indigenous people worldwide to imperialist nostalgia (Rosaldo 1989), there is a recognition in globally hegemonic discourses that capitalist expansion has indeed had a deleterious effect on indigenous people and indigenous culture. The growth of industries that reach more and more remote locations, therefore, is accompanied by renewed rounds of romanticizing and celebrating those who are found there"indigenous" people and their cultures. Thus, at the very moment when the basis of their livelihood is being undermined and their way of life destroyed, "indigenous" people are being celebrated for their knowledge of the forest, their concern for the environment, and their "philosophy" of life. Such a recognition clearly enables certain kinds of resistance to be mounted, and this recognition has been used very effectively by some groups who have employed their "exotic" status to forge a measure of self-determination. But one needs to ask why resistance to processes of colonization and extraction are seen primarily in terms of "indigenousness." Of all the identities held by people who are subject to these processes, why is indigenous identity the one most privileged in analytic description and political recognition? One would not have to be excessively paranoid or cynical to conceptualize this kind of recognition as yet another effort at domestication, as rich consumers in the West gulp down another container of Ben and Jerry's Rainforest Crunch ice cream or pay high prices for small (plastic) bottles of beauty products at The Body Shop, all in the name of the "indigenous people" who inhabit the rain forestsY Needless to say, paranoia or cynicism, even in moderate doses, hardly constitutes an adequate response. Ideas about incorporation or domestication do not acknowledge the destabilizing possibilities inherent in oppositional positions like that occupied by "the indigenous." It is precisely the ambivalence of the indigenous that I wish to explore more fully in this chapter. In the next section, I sketch the role played by the notion of "the indigenous" in nationalist and colonial discourses in India. I will then show how these attitudes to the indigenous, far from being a distant memory, are redeployed in currently popular approaches to development. Colonial and nationalist recuperations of ''the indigenous"

To understand precisely what kind of oppositional space is occupied by "the indigenous" and how this space differs from colonial and national168

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ist discourses on "native traditions," I will outline an argument about the relationship between "the indigenous," colonialism, and nationalism in India. My purpose here is not to offer a historical trajectory but to bring into sharp relief some features of the relationship between colonial and nationalist views of "the indigenous," on the one hand, and postcolonial views, on the other. My concern is to highlight certain key elements of a larger narrative, at the risk of forsaking historical subtlety for what is no more than a schematic outline. Let us begin with the observation that nationalism depends on the reversal, not the disavowal, of many binaries that are central to colonialism (Prakash 1992a:8). Thus, as demonstrated in Chapter 1, nationalist leaders shared colonial views of "progress," institutionalizing these ideas in the postindependence period through the notion of planned development (compare Ludden 1992; Chandra 1991). These ideas of progress and development had several features in common: a belief in historicity, a teleological narrative, and, combining the two, the notion that history charts the development of "man" in a unidirectional, if not necessarily linear, trajectory. Colonial and nationalist history differed in who was considered the Subject of history, the colonizer who was the agent of civilization or the native who was its forgotten heir. And the two versions differed as well in that the telos of nationalist history was the attainment of independence, whereas that could scarcely be the desired goal of colonial historiography. IS The reversal of colonial binaries was to be found in attitudes toward "the indigenous" as well. Here the situation is complicated by the fact that colonial attitudes toward the indigenous were themselves highly polarized. On one side were the Orientalists, who believed that indigenous traditions once possessed world-historical importance but that these great traditions had been lost, forgotten, or simply distorted by the passage of time. This was a way of viewing the world in which time and the "natives" were seen as sources of entropy, in which the greatness of Indian civilization lay in the dim recesses of the past. 19 In short, indigenous culture was worthwhile only to the extent that it was a museum artifact. The greatness of the Indian past had to be resurrected, but only in the manner that one reconstructs a civilization in a cultural museum. This attitude to history is by no means limited to colonialism and can still be found articulated in a number of academic and particularly in nonacademic contexts, in which an emphasis on ancient texts, high culture, great monuments, and the literary, religious, and artistic canon reinscribes a museum-like view of Indian civilization, whose shabby "Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy

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present state is implicitly compared with an enviable golden age. Such a treatment of "indigenous" society is closely linked to the spirit of "salvage ethnography" in that the emphasis lies in saving what survives of the past before it decays and disappears. Posey et al.'s (1984) call for saving what is left of aboriginal culture arises, at least in part, from the rapid decline of indigenous populations in Amazonia, but the same argument is also made because "cultures" and "societies" are threatened by "extinction" through assimilation (Rosaldo 1988). However problematic the Orientalists' position, they actually constituted the liberal group, that segment of colonizers most sympathetic to the natives. On the other side stood colonial modernizers or Anglicists who regarded native civilization with disdain. This is the position made infamous by Macaulay's minute on education. Referring to the Orientalists, Macaulay wrote, "I have never found one among them who could deny that a single shelf of a good European library was worth the whole native literature of India and Arabia" (1952:722).20 Colonial modernizers saw progress, civilization, industry, justice, and order as flowing from colonial rule, and they regarded the demand for independence with great apprehension. After the Great Revolt of 1857, they argued for the abandonment of liberal reform in favor of an unapologetic policy of rule by conquest (Metcalf 1964; Chatterjee 199P4-34). If Orientalists and modernizers shared anything, it was a disdain for that hybrid described by Homi Bhabha (1984:132) with the formula, "not quite/not white." This was the middle class, from which the leaders of the nationalist movement were drawn: too brown to be English, and too westernized to be "authentic" natives. And it was precisely this group that seized on Orientalist narratives about a golden past but altered its telling. The fact that India had been a great civilization was proof enough that there was nothing inherently second-rate or inadequate about Indians. If the India that they lived in had fallen on hard times and failed to live up to its ancient glory, it was not due to innate flaws in "the Indian character" but the historical fact of colonialism itself (Chakravarti 1989:32). It was colonial conquest that had drained India's wealth, rendered its people submissive, and robbed it of "its spirit." Accordingly, with the attainment of independence, the country would once again be able to ascend to its previous glory. It was colonialism, therefore, that was responsible for the decay in Indian civilization. Such a position, of course, fully participated in colonial discourses but inverted its judgments. It was not only in references to a golden past that nationalist attitudes 170

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to the indigenous mirrored colonial discourse. The contrast between Orientalist and modernizing positions was incorporated as an agonistic splitting within nationalist discourses, so that diametrically opposed positions were found to cohabit uneasily within them. Thus, on the one hand, one finds the glorification of indigenous systems of knowledge, social organization, and aesthetic forms, often identified with the past but sorely in need of resurrection. Gandhi's construction of India as formed of "self-sufficient village communities" is a good example of nationalist appropriations of Orientalist conceptions of "village republics" (Dewey 1972; Brow 1992). On the other hand, these discourses display the reformist urge to change traditional practices, to eradicate superstition, "backwardness," "stagnation," and invidious distinctions based on caste, class, region, religion, and language (Chakravarti 1989:32-34).2l Once again, we can see Gandhi's lifelong struggles for the "upliftment of untouchables" as part of an effort to alter tradition to render it "appropriate" for the contemporary world. For middle-class nationalists, tribal peoples represented another basis of indigenousness. Tribal groups, after all, had an originary relationship to the land that anteceded even so-called Aryan arrival myths. The more nationalism employed temporal depth as a legitimating charter through its equation with a glorious past, the more problematic became the status of first peoples who preceded that "glorious past." Here I wish to borrow an argument from Trouillot (1991), who has demonstrated that the Renaissance built a triadic relationship between the savage, utopia, and conceptions of order.22 "The West" was constructed as an ordered state by juxtaposing it to a Janus-faced Other, whose one side was the West itself in the form of a utopian projection and whose other face was a state of nature in the form of the savage. This "savage slot," far from being a creation of ethnography; was the precondition for its existence, the structural space which made possible the "discoveries" of anthropologists and which allowed a discourse on savages to be created and to be received.23 Following Partha Chatterjee (1986), one could argue that the thematic of nationalism implied a similar positioning of a utopian past in contradistinction to a savage slot. Tribal peoples occupied the "savage slot" of nationalist thought, simultaneously as noble savages, simple and primitive, and as "scheduled tribes" most in need of "upliftment" because of their lack of agricultural, financial, and educational resources. 24 As the "modem" industrializing state has developed, the tensions inherent in these polar attitudes have only increased. Thus, a utopian "Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy

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view of the savage is recovered by critiques of modernity articulated by environmentalists, nature religionists, spiritualists, and those interested in alternative medicine (see, for example, Sen 1992; Chaudhury 1991). At the same time, "modernizing" views of tribal peoples are espoused by bureaucrats and nongovernmental organizations interested in tribal "development," industrialists keen to exploit the raw materials on tribal land, and some "pro-development" politicians. The discourse of indigeneity, therefore, is unstable in that it sometimes refers to the "high traditions" valued by Orientalists and nationalists but equally to the beliefs and practices of "first peoples." For example, discussions of indigenous systems of medicine in South Asia regularly include Ayurveda, whose origin in the Vedas locates it unambiguously in a nationalist construction of "high culture." On the other hand, indigenous systems of medicine can also include the use of wildflowers, roots, and berries among tribal groups, which may bear little or no relation to "high culture." While it could be maintained that these are merely two different kinds of indigenous traditions, one would then be placing side by side two bodies of practices that are in fact hierarchically ordered in contemporary South Asia. The only reason for placing them in the same category is that they are both non-Western "systems" of medicine. They both occupy a residual space defined by the absence of "modern," that is, "Western," medicine. So it is important to keep in mind that the term "indigenous" has many different referents, even within the "same" cultural context. To speak of "the indigenous" as a unitary category is to overlook its internally hierarchical and heterogeneous character. The hetereogeneity of "the indigenous" is also visible in developmentalist discourse. In this discourse, however, some of the tension implicit in a "high tradition" versus "first peoples" view of indigeneity is sidestepped by the single-minded concentration on "indigenous peoples," who, by definition, occupy the margin of the nation-state system. "The Indigenous" in development discourse

The extent to which "indigenous knowledge" has become a key phrase in transnational ecological, agronomic, and development discourses can be gauged from the fact that it has been elevated to the status of an acronym (IK), which is also used as the logo of a publication, the Indigenous Knowledge and Development Monitor. For the most part, the indigenous knowledge movement has been led by a small group of international development advisers working in collaboration with na172

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tional scientific experts and bureaucrats, consulting for agencies such as the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), the World Bank, and the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA) and sometimes for nongovernmental organizations (NGOS). Information about "indigenous knowledges" occasionally comes from ethnographic immersion but, more often, from rapid-assessment surveys. "Natives" serve as informants and sometimes collaborate in eliciting data; significantly, they are rarely the "experts" who compile, systematize, and store the data in retrievable form.25 This is not to suggest or imply that "indigenous peoples" or their leaders do not support this endeavor. All I wish to emphasize is that there is a division of labor that is rarely commented on in the literature on indigenous knowledge. Reporting on the International Symposium on Indigenous Knowledge and Sustainable Development held in Silang, Philippines, in September 1992, the Indigenous Knowledge and Development Monitor recounted the difficulties of defining the two main concerns of the conference, "indigenous knowledge" and "sustainable development." The participants agreed to use the Brundtland Commission's definition of "sustainable development" but were less successful in forging a common understanding of "indigenous knowledge." Participants decided that it was easier to define what does not fall under this category and agreed on the following working definition formulated by Michael Warren: "The term 'indigenous knowledge' (IK) is used synonymously with 'traditional' and 'local knowledge' to differentiate the knowledge developed by a given community from the international knowledge system, sometimes also called the 'Western' system, generated through universities, governmentalist research centres and private industry. IK refers to the knowledge of indigenous peoples as well as any other defined community." (Mathias-Mundy 1993a:3-4; emphasis in original) I propose to read the ease of defining "indigenous knowledge" by negation as symptomatic of its status as a residual category, where everything that is not part of the Western, international knowledge system is inserted. In fact, an effort to describe what "indigenous knowledges" are, rather than what they are not, throws together elements from different epistemological and ideological orientations into a haphazard mixture. Negation is often a powerful political tool, one that has been quite effectively employed by marginalized groups and NGOS, for example, to resist the intrusions of the state and of international development agen"Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy

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cies. The status of "indigenous knowledge" is much more ambivalent, however, because it has chiefly been used to create a space for alternative strategies of "development" within those international agencies. It is taken as a truism that knowledge is "indigenous" if it is possessed by, or resides in, a "community." But what is a community? That turns out to be a troubling and unproblematized concept, one built on implicit assumptions of small-scale, localized, face-to-face, bounded, homogeneous, and egalitarian societies. Although indigenous knowledge is identified as "the knowledge of indigenous peoples as well as any other defined community," the relatively well-defined "community" of scientists is quite explicitly excluded. "Community" here means something quite specific (perhaps anthropologically self-evident?), as the various synonyms used for "indigenous knowledge" indicate. Sometimes indigenous knowledge is equated with "folk beliefs" (Brokensha and Riley 1980:115),26 and at other points, with specificity and "the local." In an article arguing for the complementarity of "indigenous agriculture" to the research of international crop research institutes, Pablo Eyzaguirre states: Indigenous technical knowledge is a body of information applied to the management of natural resources and labor within very specific plots. Farmers' knowledge about the specific conditions in which they produce may be more exact than the knowledge of trained researchers who are producing new crop varieties or other technologies for these environments. This is not a failure of the research system or the idealization of the low-resource farmer, but a recognition of the division oflabor between scientific agricultural research and the empirical knowledge that farmers acquire in order to produce with available resources. (1992:19; emphasis added) Others, not as enthusiastic about the potential of cooperation with "Western" science, nevertheless emphasize the "localness" of indigenous knowledge. This is how the Indigenous Knowledge and Development Monitor put the matter: "Indigenous knowledge systems relate to the ways members of a given community define and classify phenomena in the physical/natural, social, and ideational environments. Examples are local classifications of soils, knowledge of which local crop varieties grow in difficult environments, and traditional ways of treating human and animal diseases" (Mathias-Mundy 1993a:4; emphasis added). Emphasis on "the local" is here clearly tied to an understanding of the "community" as a face-to-face, geographically circumscribed entity, 174

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one, moreover, that is "traditional." That this is not merely an accidental slippage is confirmed by the dualities that are brought into play between "indigenous" and "scientific" knowledge by contrasting "local" to "global" or "international" and "specific" to "general." These contrasts are brought out very clearly in this quote from the Monitor: "Parallel to and intertwined with the rapidly advancing body of international, scientific knowledge are bodies of local knowledge derived from the empirical trial-and-error of people struggling to survive over centuries. Little of this wisdom has been recorded or validated by the scientific method. Most is localized, is transmitted orally, and is typically not codified" (Mathias-Mundy 1993a:4; emphasis added). Indigenous knowledges thus are local, specific to particular people in particular geographic regions, and are found in spatially bounded communities; by contrast, scientific, "Western" knowledge is international, generalizable, and generated in unbounded settings. So far, we have a picture remarkably reminiscent of the "traditional" versus "modern" divide found in more confident versions of modernization theory. The emphasis on local communities is sometimes given a nativist twist. Darrell Posey, for instance, argues that one of the reasons why indigenous agriculture is so well adapted to local climactic conditions in the Amazon is that it relies on "native" plants, which are more efficient in their use of tropical micronutrients (1983:246). This position is extended to its logical conclusion by those who reason that, because indigenous peoples form an integral part of the environment that they manage, "the best guarantee for the survival of nature is the survival of indigenous peoples" (Mathias-Mundy 1993b7). In this manner, native plants and native peoples are brought together by their shared experience of "nature," which in turn is constituted by and through them. The loss of forests and species is seen as going hand in hand with the "disappearance and disruption of traditional societies," which is also destroying their "knowledge base." There is thus a need to preserve "knowledge, in situ, for its own sake" and to keep the indigenous system "isolated" and "unsullied" (Mathias-Mundy 1993a:4-5). Paradoxically, however, the justification for salvage ethnography is provided by "the onslaughts of industrialization, urbanization, and Western culture" (5), the very processes that advocates of indigenous knowledge would like to see ended. Thus, Posey et al. conclude their essay (1984:104) with the observation that "indigenous societies of Amazonia are in rapid decline. There are a few aboriginal cultures still relatively intact, but little time remains to salvage the valuable information resulting from millennia of "Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy

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accumulated ecological knowledge." Just as the argument about preserving nature through native people results in the spatial incarceration of the native (Appadurai 1988:37), so does salvage ethnography attempt to fix natives in time. I recognize that the agonistic relationship between "modem" and "indigenous," resulting from the structural inequalities of the world system, sometimes leaves no option but the strategic deployment of one pole of that binary. But when the struggle for survival of marginal groups comes to be equated to the often unabashedly nostalgic goal of "preserving" their "system of knowledge," is their agency acknowledged, let alone respected? The need to preserve indigenous knowledge in situ follows from its property of being integrally connected to everyday life, religion, and ritual. 27 Unlike Western science, which separates religion and ritual from livelihood, indigenous knowledge is holistic and culturally bound. Religious practices and ritual performances can be central to managing and conserving the environment, a connection that is severed in "Western" science. 28 Holistic approaches contrast with the disciplinary specializations of science. This makes it difficult for centers in the IK network to "capture" indigenous knowledge systems. Whereas Western scientific approaches separate disciplines such as agriculture, forestry, natural resource management, aquaculture, human health, veterinary medicine, livestock management, communication systems, and organizational theory, indigenous knowledge systems make no such distinction (Mathias-Mundy 1993b:6). Of course, characterizing indigenous knowledges in this way raises fascinating questions about commensurability. How are different knowledges which are embodied and which are embedded in a particular cultural and moral milieu to be "translated" into the disembodied categories of a completely different knowledge system? How can people who are themselves practitioners and products of "the Western knowledge system" even begin to identify and describe, let alone analyze, systems of knowledge which are radically other and which have been constructed before, and lie beyond, "the West"? It is seldom appreciated in the "Indigenous Knowledge" literature that opposing indigenous knowledges to "Western" science in this way places its advocates in an impossible situation, for it undermines the epistemological foundations of their own knowledge claims. It could be argued, for instance, that the act of bringing a congerie of culturally specific knowledges into the singular category "indigenous knowledge" itself grows out of the homogenizing and universalizing tendencies of Westem science. This is the very tendency that those transnational experts 176

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and national elites who are proponents of indigenous knowledge want to combat (Agrawal 1995). Another questionable assumption made by proponents of indigenous knowledge is that all such knowledge is the cumulative result of generations or centuries of experimentation and wisdom. The evidence for this is simply the longevity of "the people" who possess the knowledge. Brokensha and Riley put the matter most clearly: "Mbeere and other folk-belief systems contain much that is based on extremely accurate, detailed and thoughtful observations, made over many generations. Without this basic 'scientific' knowledge (and disregarding any 'irrational' elements) the Mbeere would not have survived in their harsh and marginal environment. The point here is that accumulated familiarity and shared experience gives advantage to indigenous rather than to exotic evaluations" (1980: 115). "Survival" and "evolution" are the key indices that provide the evidence for a progressive theory of knowledge. 29 The view of knowledge as something that is accumulated over generations and tested and refined by experimentation is surprisingly like the hegemonic idealization of "Western science," which is purportedly most unlike indigenous knowledge. In a fascinating study of the role of trees in a Dogon village in Mali, van Beek and Banga (1992:69) note that the bush was considered the source of life, wisdom, and knowledge, which was used up and worn down in the process of being applied in the village. People in the past were considered to know inherently more than those in the present. Knowledge was viewed as something that dissipated and was consumed by use. Here is an "indigenous" view of knowledge that is anything but cumulative and progressive. If indigenous knowledge were not something that had accumulated over generations or millennia, would it be worth saving? Would it still be the object of "salvage ethnography?" These are complicated questions that one cannot even raise in the dualistic framework employed in discourses of indigeneity. Because indigenous knowledge is identified as primarily local, culturally specific, and embedded in lifeways and worldviews, it would be easy to conclude that it is both widely shared and uniformly dispersed within an indigenous group. Although some versions of indigenous knowledge clearly take this position (Johnson 1980), others are keenly aware that knowledge is differentially available within an indigenous group. David Brokensha and Bernard Riley (1980:121) argue that "no informant has a total knowledge of his culture" and point out, for example, that among the Mbeere of central Kenya, older women are par"Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy 177

ticularly well informed about herbs, boys who herd know a great deal about edible fruits, and honey collectors are sources of detailed knowledge about the flowering sequences of local plants. Not only is there internal differentiation, but it is sometimes argued that indigenous knowledge, taken as an entire system, may have "problems." Brokensha and Riley (1980:115) concede that "irrational elements" exist in indigenous knowledge systems, and Pablo Eyzaguirre (1992:26) evaluates farmers' knowledge systems in Honduras to be "incomplete and biased." Eyzaguirre's position follows from his desire to demonstrate the complementarity of indigenous knowledge to scientific knowledge, which he clearly regards as being superior. 30 The question arises as to which framework is being employed to make evaluations about rationality, and how one determines whether practices are safe or dangerous. Advocates of indigenous knowledge, therefore, unwittingly fall back on the seemingly "self-evident" norms of Western science in making assessments about indigenous systems of thought. 31 Similar contradictions arise in the claim made by advocates of indigenous knowledge that it is neither a static nor a conservative system. Brokensha and Riley, for example, state that the Mbeere were not resistant to change but readily utilized new crops and technologies. Adoptions were especially likely to occur when they "could be absorbed into their social system" (1980:126). Eyzaguirre, too, reports that studies of farm households demonstrate that farmers change rapidly to exploit new economic opportunities as long as it does not affect crop diversity (1992:12). If this line of reasoning is followed to its logical conclusion, however, and indigenous knowledge systems are shown to have adopted, borrowed, and changed over centuries, inevitably including adoptions from "Western" science and technology, what essential core of authenticity is left untouched that makes it "indigenous"? This is not an idle question, at least in the wake of colonial conquest. 1 can do no better than to echo Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's skepticism about claims to purity and the apt strategy that she proposes for rethinking the question of the indigenous: "I cannot understand what indigenous theory there might be that can ignore the reality of nineteenthcentury history.... To construct indigenous theories one must ignore the last few centuries of historical involvement. 1 would rather use what history has written for me" (1990:69). Not only must one contend with a few centuries of European colonial conquest in most cases, but one must also deal with a much longer history of connection in which people, goods, plants, animals, ideas, currencies, and so forth were 178

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exchanged between the far corners of the world (see, for example, Frank 1993; Frank and Gills 1993; Abu-Lughod 1989; Ghosh 1993; Wallerstein 1974). Attention to the long history of connection is not a strategy to dismiss essentializing claims to authenticity. Rather, it enables a different kind of question to be posed whose goal is not primarily that of uncovering the "truth" about claims to indigenousness. Instead of asking whether particular practices, beliefs, or knowledges are truly "indigenous" or have been altered by "the West," we need to locate "the indigenous" within a discourse in which the question of origins becomes paramount.

Locating the Indigenous

Postcolonial critiques of nationalism have made the search for origins a problematic endeavor, enabling us to see that one way to understand the flourishing of discourses on "indigenousness" in the late-capitalist world is to relate "the indigenous" to the notion of "tradition." Comparing "the indigenous" with "the traditional" helps us realize that "tradition" and "indigenousness" are twinned concepts that occupy the role of the Other of modernity. Supporters of modernity find their Other in "tradition" that, not surprisingly, happens to be located primarily in the Third World. Critics of modernity, by contrast, find their Other in "the indigenous." As the project of modernity has come under increasing attack, the evaluative scale has shifted: "tradition," long-conceived as the chief stumbling block to the arduous pilgrimage into consumer heaven, has been increasingly replaced by "the indigenous," the alternative, eco-friendly, sustainable space outside, or resistant to, modernity. To speak of "tradition" and "the indigenous" as twinned is to propose that the Other of modernity is Janus-faced. Supporters of the modernist project formed "the traditional" as a residual category, which contained everything that was devalued for not being modern. If there was one thing that "traditional" beliefs, practices, and institutions shared, it was a lack of modernity. They were defined by absence, and it is this absence that constituted a coherent, unitary "tradition" out of a disparate and inchoate mass of incommensurable beliefs and practices. For the same reason, the "traditional" has always been a temporally unstable category. The telos of narratives of modernity would require the elimination of the residual. Such an emptying out was always immanent in the teleology of modernity; however, it could be reached only asymptotically. Although the "traditional," as a residual, fought a con"Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy 179

tinuously losing battle to the forces of the modem, it could never be totally annihilated, because it provided the foil with which modernity defined itself. 32 The modem project thus became one of constant displacement of "the traditional" to ever more constricted domains. 33 This is what made "tradition" an unstable, shifting domain, and this is precisely what made the efforts to give it a pathetic privilege so futile. To fight for the preservation of "tradition" was to fight a battle whose outcome was already scripted. What does this brief excursus into the relation between "modernity" and "tradition" tell us about indigenousness? If I am right in suggesting that "the indigenous" is a twin to "tradition," the other face ofJanus, then we might reach the disturbing conclusion that some of the analysis presented above for "the traditional" holds for "the indigenous" as well. Indeed, I will argue that one of the reasons, perhaps the main reason, why "the indigenous" turns out to be such a productive Signifier is that it too functions as a residual category. Critics of modernity have seized on "the indigenous" as a means to bring together an extraordinarily varied set of phenomena. It is not clear what could possibly unite all of them unless one understands that it is a grab bag for that which is not modem: unincorporated, resistant, incommensurable, originary, authentic, or, simply, an alternative. The discourse of modernity thus triangulates the relationship of "tradition" to "indigenousness" and finds postcolonial settings to be privileged locations for its operation in both cases. Keeping this relationship in mind may help us temper the celebratory tone that has accompanied the discovery of "the indigenous": there may be less that separates it from "the traditional" than meets the eye. Although "tradition" and "indigenousness" are both located Similarly as the Other of "the modem," there is an important difference between them: while "the traditional" is defined as the lack of modernity, "the indigenous" is defined by what modernity lacks. It is defined not by excess but by the failure of modernity. In this sense, the indigenous is not strictly the opposite of the traditional. Thus, "indigenous" knowledge about agronomy, forestry, and wildlife is premised on sustainability, equity, and harmony with nature, whereas "modem" science is destructive, exploitative, and patriarchal;34 "indigenous" societies are based on community, sharing, and lack of hierarchy, whereas "modem" societies are based on individualism, acquisitiveness, and hierarchy CGuha 1989). Very often, the contrasting terms are left implicit, which only helps to underline the argument about "the indigenous" being defined as the Other of modernity. 180

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The farmers I met in Alipur present an excellent case because they brought an "indigenous" understanding to an agriculture practiced with chemical fertilizers, electric tube wells, and hybrid seeds. The terms in which farmers in Alipur formulated, presented, and justified their agricultural decisions relied heavily, though not exclusively, on an "indigenous" understanding of agriculture. For this reason, perhaps, it might be tempting to refer to it as a shared system of knowledge. There are several reasons, however, why referring to indigenous agronomy as a "shared system of knowledge" is, in my opinion, misleading. First, as Appadurai has emphasized (1987), knowledge is not uniformly shared among different classes and castes or men and women in a village. 35 In Alipur, traditional agricultural castes such as the jats pride themselves on being good agriculturists and often express scorn for the farming abilities and work habits of other castes, both those above them in the ritual hierarchy and those below. Second, attributing a "systematicity" to indigenous knowledges of agronomy carries with it some questionable implications. To begin with, there is the implication that a coherent and systematic theory of agronomy is discursively available to peasants. It is further implied that indigenous knowledges of agronomy exist in some kind of stable (although not static) equilibrium and achieve a degree of closure as a complete system. This latter implication is buttressed by the fact that the new HYV inputs-seeds, fertilizers, irrigation sources, and pesticides-have, in what appears to be an effortless manner, been incorporated into a humoral agronomic system. But such appearances are misleading. What gives "indigenous" knowledges of agronomy their power is that they represent culturally constituted recipes for dealing with the varying conditions and exigencies encountered in farming activities. They become important in this sense of informing and motivating the actions of peasants, and not because they are discursively retrievable as a complete system of thought. 36 Furthermore, agronomical explanations are necessarily entangled in the politics of agricultural operations and thus have an essentially disputed and unstable character. Finally, we have to recognize that differential access to the "legitimate" knowledge of agricultural officials (whose explanations are based on biochemistry) has resulted in an interpenetration of this incommensurable idiom of agronomy, therefore calling into question the degree of closure of the indigenous "system." In all these respects, then, indigenous knowledges of agronomy did not constitute a "system." The best way to understand "indigenous" agronomical knowledges, I "Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy

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think, is to see them as acting in two essential ways: as logics that enable the classification of crops, soils, and other inputs (more on this follows), and as positing certain links or associations between the predispositions of soil, crop, fertilizer, and irrigation water. Of course, these two functions are closely related in that, on the one hand, classification entails both separation and connection and, on the other, notions of compatibility between the crop and the soil, for example, presuppose that both crops and soils are divided into several categories. From discussions with farmers in Alipur in 1984-85, 1989, and 199192, I discerned two important dimensions to classification. The first of these is not limited to crops but is applied to all living organisms. In this view, all living matter must consist of appropriate proportions of humoral elements-hot, cold, dry, and wetY As one of my respondents told me (employing the authority of the Vedas), good health for plants as well as for people consists of a balance of heat and cold, dryness and wetness. When anyone of these elements is in excess, the living organism falls ill. According to Richard Kurin, who has presented an excellent, detailed analysis of humoral agronomy (1983:285):38 "Hot and cold respectively refer to the expenditure and conservation of energy and wet and dry to the receptivity and resistance of matter.... Initially, life in plants ... can only exist if sufficient levels of innate heat and wetness occur. As heat is expended, growth and development occur-matter is transformed from more amorphous and malleable wetter forms to more rigid drier forms." It was clear from what farmers had to say that at any point in time, the disposition of a particular crop depended not only on its innate disposition (which depends on its species as well as its stage in the developmental cycle) but also on the disposition of the inputs that had been applied to it and the disposition of the soil. Thus, a complex combination of factors works to determine the health of a crop at a particular moment. A second dimension to the classification of crops was proVided by one of my respondents, who broke down crops into three basic categories: those which grow under the soil (potatoes, onions, carrots, and so on); those which grow above the soil and have pods (lentils, peas, gram, mung, and the like); and those which grow above the soil but not in pods (wheat, rice, barley, maize, millet, and cane, for example). These can be further classified according to whether they strike deep roots and "pull" nutrients from below or whether they have shallow roots and gather their nutrients from surface soil. I was told that in the case of crops with pods, it is especially important to keep the ground clean and 182

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free of weeds. They should also be planted with enough space between rows so that the wind could pass "cleanly" through them: the seed inside ripens fully only if it receives the full impact of the wind. The next section is devoted to a close analysis of how classifications of crops and soils actually operate in the discourses and practices of farmers in Alipur. For lack of a better term, when I first wrote about this topic, I labeled the agronomical practices of Alipur's farmers "indigenous" (Gupta 1988). Insofar as my concern was to demonstrate the distance of peasant agronomy from bioscientific conceptions of agriculture, that label was useful. But my choice of "the indigenous" erred on the side of emphasizing "difference" and failed to come to terms with the hybridities of agronomical knowledges and agricultural practices in Alipur, knowledges and practices that I would argue are constitutive of "postcoloniality" in contemporary India. The detailed examination that follows shows why ideas of postcolonial modernity are essential in theorizing what is meant by "indigenous" agricultural practices in Alipur.

"Indigenous" Knowledges of Agronomy in Alipur

There are two main agricultural seasons in the Gangetic plains of western Uttar Pradesh. The first is the monsoon or kharif harvest, which is usually sown around the time of the first rains in late June or early July and harvested in September and October. The winter or rabi crop is sown in November and December and harvested in April. Some farmers grow a third crop, called zaid (literally, "excess"), which is sown in April and harvested by the end of May. Before the advent of tube well technology, farmers had to wait until the first rains to sow the monsoon crop. But the ability to pump out groundwater enabled them to start sowing before the rains came. Thus when I lived in Alipur in 1984-85, on early mornings in the month of May, before the first light spilled over the horizon, I could hear the oxen being goaded to plow in a straight line. Once the sun was up, it rapidly became too hot to do much work: people and oxen were drained of energy, and it was impossible to stay out beyond midmorning. Temperatures reached a scorching 110 degrees in the afternoon, and everyone took shelter beneath shady trees and thatched roofs. Late in the month, some farmers had already planted fodder [jowar] , although most waited until the beginning ofJune. Maize was planted all through the month of June and especially intensively in the last week, around the time that the monsoons were expected. Pearl millet [bajra] was sown after the first "Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy 183

monsoon rains, usually in the first half of July. July and August were spent weeding the standing crops and harvesting fodder for cattle. Green fodder was especially valuable at that time, for it coincided with the peak cattle-breeding season. Most of the kharif crops were harvested in September, including maize and the part of the millet (jowar) crop which had not already been employed as fodder. Some farmers used the time between the harvesting of the monsoon crop and the sowing of the winter crop to plant a fast-growing relative of mustard called lahai. This was also the time when chickpeas and peas were sown. The harvesting of pearl millet began in late September and extended into October. After the fields were cleared of the monsoon crop, work began in earnest for the main winter crop, wheat. The fields were plowed as much as possible to prepare the soil for the winter wheat. All through October and November, this work, more than any other, preoccupied farmers. The work day began early, when the soil was still moist from the overnight dew and thus more malleable to being worked with the plow. Wheat was sown all through November and into December. Some varieties had to be sown early because they took longer to ripen than others. After the hard work to sow the wheat, there was a lull in farming activities. Most wheat plots are no longer weeded, so apart from supplying irrigation, there was not much to be done to the standing crop. Those who had sown sugarcane, however, were kept busy in January and February harvesting the cane and selling or processing it. Those who wanted to plant cane in a new plot did so in February and March. This procedure was very time consuming and frequently required the help of an extended circle of friends, who were then treated to a feast. From late March onward began, for a whole month, the harvesting of barley and wheat. Because harvesting was a slow and labor-intensive operation that required a significant amount of hired labor, wage rates and labor demand peaked at this time. Lest an unseasonal rain destroy the entire crop, harvesting was qUickly followed by threshing. By this time, it was once again extremely hot, and much of the work of harvesting took place early in the morning and in the late afternoon. When there was electricity, threshing was done all night long, when it was cool enough for the laborers to work. The few farmers who planted a zaid crop did so after the wheat had been harvested. But most farmers preferred to let the soil "rest" for a brief period over the summer. They plowed it to dig up weeds and to allow the heat of the sun to reach the soil, but this period was, for the most part, the slowest in the farming cycle. 184

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Field being plowed with a pair of bullocks in foreground and a pair of buffalo in background

Soils were classified into five categories: yellow [peelee mitti or bhoodal, sandy [raytiili or baluil, loam [do-mathl, clay [chiknil, and white [safayd mitti or usarl .39 Loam, considered midway between sandy and clay, was thought to be the most fertile, and wasteland consisted of either yellow or white soil. Farmers believed sandy soil to be "lighter" than loam, and clay "heavier," the implication being that heavier soil retained moisture better, was more sustainably productive, and was less affected by the seasons.40 To understand the activities of farmers in Alipur systematically, I have subdivided agricultural operations into eight parts. (These topics correspond to the sequence of stages followed in farming operations. 41 ) For each operation, I will closely examine the explanations offered for particular actions or sequences of actions. Different agricultural operations were closely tied to a gendered division of labor in Alipur, as in most of northern India. Plowing and sowing were the only agricultural operations done exclusively by menY In all other stages of the agricultural cycle, women were involved, and some stages of agriculture were largely the domain of women. Weeding was carried out by the whole family, including young children. Irrigation was done primarily by men. Fertilizer was applied by both men and women. Harvesting was not gender-specific, and harvest labor was paid "Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy

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as a proportion of the quantity harvested. Threshing and winnowing operations were conducted by both men and women, although other postharvest tasks such as the drying and processing of grains was done entirely by women. A great proportion of the work associated with cattle was done by women. Men mostly, although not exclusively, operated the fodder-cutting machine, but feeding cattle, cleaning them, and removing cow dung was largely the job of women. Caste and gender interacted to specify which jobs were done by women. Thakur women did not do any work in the fields, almost never leaving the confines of the home for work-related purposes. Lowercaste women worked as wage laborers and thus had to be outside the home most of the time. Women belonging to castes such as brahmins and jats that owned substantial amounts of land almost never worked as laborers, although they did a fair amount of work on their own family farms. Women of all castes did almost all the household work, including child care, cooking, cleaning, washing the clothes, and pumping water from hand pumps for household needs. Almost all the purchasing of household goods was done by men, as they were the ones who went to the market. But women, or very often children, did go to the little shops in the village that sold household necessities. My goal in the detailed descriptions of farming practices that follow is to demonstrate that an understanding of the lives of subaltern Third World people such as the farmers of Alipur is facilitated by an attention to questions of postcoloniality. Agriculture in Alipur does not conform to descriptions of "traditional" farming or to the idealized picture of subalterns earnestly guarding "indigenous knowledges" against the insurmountable odds of a homogenizing world system. At the same time, Alipur's peasants can be easily distinguished from industrial agriculturists in the "West." Neither occupying a position of pure opposition to the modern nor assimilable to a homogenizing "Western" episteme, farmers in Alipur constantly destabilized the oppositions that have framed explanations of subaltern, Third World peoples. It is this position of hybridity-practices of "mistranslation," alternative constructions of modernity-always structured in dominance and experienced through various modes of inequality, that I will try to emphasize in what follows. 43 Crop choice

Contrary to my assumptions when I went to "the field" for the first time, understanding farmers' decisions about crop choice proved anything 186

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but straightforward. Three factors seemed to dominate the explanations that I was offered for why certain crops were grown as opposed to others. First, the disposition of the crop had to be carefully calibrated to that of the soil. If the soil in a particular plot was weak, sandy, or "cold," it could support only a crop that suited those properties. To plant any other crop was to create a mismatch that guaranteed low yields and perhaps even prevented regeneration of the soil. Because the ecological consequences of crop choice will be explored more fully in the next chapter, I will concentrate here on the match between the "character" of the crop and that of the soil (Vasavi 1994). The second explanation, proffered quite frequently, had to do with timing. Questions of timing were, on the whole, critical not just for crop selection but also for all agricultural operations. Third, there was the ever present difficulty of adequate resources. Farmers invariably explained the gap between what they should have done and what they actually did by referring to their inability to purchase necessary inputs. Sometimes, resource problems took the form of a shortage of adequate household labor and the inability to hire outside labor for agricultural tasks. To begin with the first point, the notion that the disposition and "strength" of the soil should match the disposition of the crop was very widely shared. The soil in certain places was said to be able to "catch" or "get hold of" [pakadnaaJ certain crops. The ability of the soil to get hold of a particular crop stemmed from its inherent qualities-its disposition in terms of heaviness, strength, and texture. 44 The success or failure of new varieties was often judged in terms of how well the soil reacted to them, whether it "caught" the new species or not [pakadti hai ya nahiJ. As Suresh put it: "There are places where the soil gets hold of jowar, somewhere else it catches bajra, and in some areas it helps maize more. In some areas, rice is mostly grown. So where there is a tradition, wherever the soil holds onto a particular crop, people there start growing that crop. Our land is sandy, so bajra caught on well. It started growing well, thus everyone started growing it." The agency attributed to the soil was critical in the conceptualization of the relation between the land and crops. The land was not merely the object of labor or the medium through which the agency of the farmer could be exercised. It had its own volition, its own character, its own disposition, its own ability to act on the plant. The dispersion of several crops on the same field was explained in terms of a careful evaluation of the strength of the soil in various parts, as well as the ability of the soil to get hold of the crop. Dhani Singh had "Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy

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rented a plot adjacent to the one he owned and in each plot had planted some parts with maize and some with jowar. Puzzled by this, I asked whether it would not have saved him time and labor to have planted all the maize in one place and the jowar in another. His explanation for what seemed, at first glance, a classic "risk-aversion strategy" was the following: "Suppose a field has less strength, then we do fodder [nyaar] or jowar in it. And maize is grown only in a strong field so that output is good. There were small portions in both fields that were strong, so we could grow just a little maize. If there are some barren spots [kaln or usn] in the field-usri means places where the field has less strengthwe plant gwal in that. And where it is slightly better, where the soil helps the crop grow well, jowar is planted there. And the land which is even stronger, that's where we sow maize." Therefore, significant local variation in the quality of the soil determined the choice of crop, with both the quality of the soil and the properties of the crop suggesting the best course of action. One of the most important properties of crops, of course, was the time that they took to ripen and harvest. A delay in planting or a longstanding crop could affect the output of the subsequent crop. This was particularly true of the kharif crops, because the chief source of income was the sale of wheat planted in the rabi growing season. Concerns about timing were ubiquitous in discussions about crop choice. An example was provided by Dhani Singh, who was telling me why he chose to plant legumes in a field: We didn't sow arhar or urad [different kinds of lentils] in that field because the next crop-wheat-is delayed. It gets late. If, for example, arhar is sown in a plot, then if you get late for wheat, what will you do? You will fling [maarangey] twenty to twenty-five kilos of fertilizer for every bigha, by broadcasting it. Only then will you plant it. For the small farmer, that turns out to be a heavy burden. It's not at all a heavy burden for the big farmer. The small farmer [chotey kisan] will want to get by with fewer inputs. Arhar should not be sown because it is harmful to the next crop. The implication of the long cropping cycle for lentils is that it leaves very little time to prepare the fields for wheat, which is, after all, the main food and cash crop. Dhani Singh implies that one way to compensate for the shorter preparation time left after harvesting lentils is to apply large doses of chemical fertilizer. Twenty kilograms of fertilizer per bigha was approximately double of what was considered standard or 188

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"good" practice in Alipur in 1984-85. Dhani Singh made it clear that such high doses of inputs were beyond the means of small farmers, presumably including himself in such a category. As the owner of 20.5 bighas, however, he did not really fit such a description. One possible answer to the dilemma of growing lentils would be to sow them early, so that they were harvested in time to prepare the fields for the winter wheat. Dhani Singh ruled out such a strategy for other reasons: Suppose you sow lentils [arharl early [aghaiil. Then, it will grow excessively and the output will be low. Its stem grows too much and so it has fewer beans. Now, if you plant late or in the middle of the planting season, then the production will be greater. More beans will appear, its stem will grow less, it'll spread out a lot. Then production will be greater. For example, the person whose field is over on this side, Hamir Singh, he has planted lentils within his maize. After sowing the maize and harvesting it, he dropped fertilizer in the lentils. Only then has his output oflentils been all right. There has been no significant shortage. In a farm of six bighas, the owner [maalikl has put ten sacks of fertilizer. "Ten sacks?" I could not contain my amazement. "Yes, ten sacks. Ten of a dhadi [ten kilogramsl each." Normally; one sack of fertilizer has approximately fifty kilograms, and if ten normal-size sacks had been applied, it would have been the eqUivalent of putting five hundred kilograms in an area a little less than an acre. One hundred kilograms of fertilizer was still very high, especially for the monsoon harvest, but well within the range of possibility. In Dhani Singh's view, intercropping lentils with maize was preferable to any other strategy. If lentils were planted early, output was poor; if they were planted in the middle of the season or late, there was not enough time for the next crop. Thus little advantage existed to planting arhar. However, many farmers believed that planting lentils had beneficial effects on the soil, a theme that is explored in greater depth in the following chapter. Finally, resource constraints were frequently mentioned as a reason for planting a particular crop. Suresh explained why he chose to grow bajra (pearl millet) rather than maize in the monsoon harvest: It's like this. What we do depends on our circumstances at that time. The first thing is how much we have by way of resources, for example, whether we have water or not. I grew bajra because I "Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy

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thought it would grow with less inputs and we would be able to get higher yields-that is possible with bajra. Maize would have required more inputs. If I could have managed the production of maize, with regard to weeding, irrigation [which has to be administered in quick succession], as well as fertilizer, then I would have planted maize. But since we didn't have that capability, we just caught hold of one crop, we just planted bajra .... We sow only the crop that we are capable of managing. Suresh's explanation of the choice of bajra as flowing out of resource constraints was perfectly compatible with the other factors mentioned above-namely, sowing bajra would not lead to problems with timing, and there was a match between the properties of bajra and his land. Yet even when resource constraints were mentioned as an important reason for planting something, they were combined with explanations that would defy a straightforwardly instrumentalist logic. For once, Dhani Singh was not accompanied by anyone when I interviewed him in the room where I lived on the state farm. We had set up a time earlier at which he had failed to show up. We made yet another appointment, and just when I was beginning to wonder if Dhani Singh had hidden reservations about being interviewed, he appeared at the door. I began, as I did with all others, with questions about the kharif harvest and then went on to the winter crop. Dhani Singh had made the highly unusual decision of planting his entire plot with "traditional" (desi) wheat, the only farmer in Alipur to do so in 1984-85. Everyone else had switched to the new high-yielding varieties, which could be coaxed to yield higher returns with appropriate doses of fertilizer and water. Dhani Singh explained that the decision to plant desi wheat was partially made because it required less resources than the new varieties. But on further questioning, he revealed two other reasons. One reason was that the rotis made from the new varieties were not as tasty as those made from desi wheat, an opinion that was almost universally shared in Alipur. Yet, that fact alone did not prevent others from switching to the new high-yielding varieties. When I pointed that out to Dhani Singh, he told me that they had planted whatever seed was in the house. Although his family might consider exchanging seed with other farmers, they would never purchase it on the market. In fact, the preferred strategy was to keep some of their own output as seed for next year's harvest. 45 The importance of nonpurchased inputs and the taste of the new varieties thus entered as 190

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important qualifications to a straightforwardly resource-constrained, decision-making model of crop choice. The qualities of the crop and its compatibility with the qualities of the soil, factors of timing, availability of household labor, and resource constraints thus combined in complex ways to determine the choice of crops. Arguments about compensating for the lack of time for preparing the field with additional doses of chemical fertilizer and discussions of how the choice of crop is determined by the availability of water and fertilizer went hand in hand with matching the disposition of the crop to that of the soil and positing that the land had its own agency.46 "Modem" explanations were thus inextricably woven into "indigenous" ones, and any effort to reinstate this dichotomy would have the inevitable consequence of reading the evidence tendentiously. If compatibility between the crop and soil was important, what affected the qualities of the soil? The labor expended in preparing the land for sowing and in looking after the crop clearly affected soil quality, and it is to this topic thatI tum to in the next section. Field preparation and plowing

Preparing the land for sowing was perhaps the most labor-intensive and time-consuming activity for men in Alipur. Women did not plow or sow but carried out most of the weeding, took an active role in harvesting, and often did much of the threshingY The plow used was produced of either iron or wood [desiJ and made a single furrow behind a pair of oxen, although buffalo were sometimes used. In 1984-85, only two households in Alipur owned a tractor. Rather than bear the expense of keeping oxen, those with very small landholdings sometimes preferred to pay a tractor owner to plow their land rapidly. But, tractor owners were loath to work someone else's fields before their own. Thus those who could afford to keep oxen did so because it enabled them to control better the timing of plowing. Although most farmers in Alipur generally believed that the more times the ground was plowed in preparation for sowing, the better it was for the crop, not everyone was convinced of this connection. At the beginning of this chapter I quoted Suresh, who claimed that plowing less often was better for his maize crop. On the other hand, there was almost universal agreement that the winter crop of wheat gave higher yields if the field was plowed many times. Suresh had plowed his wheat fields only four times and was speculating about the effect of a greater number of plowings: "Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy

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Field being leveled with wooden block

More plowings have a positive effect on wheat. The more times wheat is plowed, the better. There was enough time according to my calculations to have plowed eight times. Yes, I would have done eight plowings. If my health had been okay, I would have continued to use the plow in this field. It would certainly have made some difference. Another thing was that since there was no grass in this field, we didn't even think that the right time would pass. That's why I thought, "Why waste time 7" And so I went ahead with sowing. There was no time left. Even so, we got quite late. On the one hand, the bajra was harvested late, then we plowed so we got even more late. To plow at the right time requires preplanning. If we had planted maize in this, it would have given us the time to plow. Planting bajra did not enable us to find the time-it is cut later than maize, a whole month later. For this reason, the wheat sowing had to be a whole month late too. Suresh was unable to plow as many times as he wished to for two reasons. First, both he and his two teenage sons fell ill at the time most critical for sowing. Second, he harvested the previous crop ofbajra late, which did not leave enough time to plow the field properly for wheat. One factor working in his favor was that the bajra field had very few

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weeds in it. He therefore felt that he could go ahead and sow wheat in it, despite the low number of plowings that the field had received. Why was plowing many times helpful for the wheat crop? The usual answer was that the more times the soil was turned, the more productive it became. If the soil was well turned [goondl, it retained water better and imparted its nutrients to the crop relatively easily. The wooden plow turned over the earth almost a foot deep, which helped to hold water. It went into the earth at a slight angle, operating like a spade in alternatively going up and down as it pulled up and dug in by turn. By contrast, the iron plow had a wider cutting edge and a shorter bit. It dug almost vertically into the ground, displacing weeds but not turning the soil over. I was told that iron plows became popular only after the introduction of chemical fertilizers, as these plows made the use of fertilizers mandatory to maintain the productivity of the soil. How many times a particular field was plowed also depended on the number of weeds present during the previous crop and after it had been harvested. Suresh was pointing to the difference between three areas on his field. In the monsoon harvest, he had planted maize, bajra, and jowar. He had plowed the area with maize four times, that with bajra three times, and the fodder field just once. What accounted for the differential treatment of the three areas? Suresh explained that it was due to the presence of weeds: It's like this: the field in which I saw black grass [haali ghaasl ... a kind of grass grows. To kill the grass, the average number of plowings [required] was excessive. [Normally] 1 keep plowing until the time the field is ready for sowing, until the day when there is no grass or no weeds [hharpatvaar], no matter how many plowings are needed. On the other hand, one has to be aware of the time too. If the time to sow is at hand, then I may leave the plowing halfdone too. So this was the reason. The maize field had black grass so it needed one extra plowing. The bajra field was clear, and for this reason we could get by with plowing it less. The jowar field was plowed just once because there was no grass or leaves underneath. It was clean from before. We have to see how much grass there is to decide how much to plow. The desire to plow the field as many times as possible before planting wheat is tempered by the necessity of not delaying sowing operations.

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Certain parts of the field are then plowed more than others, depending on the quantity of weeds and on the previous "cleanliness" of the field. Once again, as in the case of crop choice, we find that field preparation depended on a complex mix of factors. Decisions about how many times to plow were based on a number of different elements: humoral understandings of the relationship between the land and the crop, as seen in Suresh's decision to plow the field only four times to prevent the land from becoming excessively hot and moist; issues of timing, evident from Suresh's conflict between plowing more or sowing before it got too late; the effectiveness of certain tools and techniques, as revealed by the comparison between the effects of the wooden and iron plows on the soil; and, finally, the presence of weeds that needed to be uprooted. Selection of seeds

Once the land was plowed, it was ready to be seeded. For most crops, there were only one or two varieties of seed available, but several generations of commercially marketed wheat hybrids were in use in Alipur. How did farmers determine which variety of wheat to sow? How were new varieties of seed introduced into the village? The most obvious means, of course, was through the recommendations of other farmers. Suresh had planted varietal Number 2204 for the first time in the winter of 1985. I asked him where he had obtained information about this variety. It turned out that relatives of his had praised it very highly the previous year. So he obtained some seed from them and planted it on his land. And where had his relatives obtained the seed? They had procured it from a neighboring village. By the time Suresh acquired the seed, it was already at least two generations old. This fact did not seem to bother him, for he claimed that a simple test told him when the seed had become too old: Wheat seed lasts quite a few years. As long as it keeps giving good production, we understand the seed to be all right. If there is any shortage in production, if we irrigate and fertilize it, and it still doesn't grow, and if everyone around starts saying that your seed is now old, then we change it. The old desi wheat seed used to last a fairly long time, it lasted ten to fifteen years. And these new varieties, these last at least seven years, and sometimes ten. Now take Number 2009: it has been used for a fair amount of time, and if we see some weakness in it, then we'll change it. Like the Number 312 cane we had, it worked for a fair while, then it became weak, it 194

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started drying, it started uprooting, so we stopped cultivating it because it dries, uproots ... the cane dries .... It's the same way with wheat. Suresh had switched from Number 2009 to Number 2204 because the former was not as profitable as the latter. He told me that Number 2009 fetched a lower price in the market. Even if he were to sell it at the government scales set up to purchase wheat surpluses at a preannounced price, he would have to be content with "number two" rates. So he decided to cultivate a variety that would fetch a higher price on the market. He did not know if Number 2204 would work on his land, because it was recommended by people who belonged to a different area. But he decided to take a chance and plant it. If his land "got hold of" the new variety and the output was good, then he would cultivate it the following year. Otherwise, he would just have to swallow the loss. Another farmer who had planted RR21 told me that he preferred RR21 to another variety, Sona, because it needed fewer inputs-fertilizer and water-and still gave good yields. If for some reason one was unable to irrigate the crop on time, the yields from Sona would drop sharply, but that was not the case with RR21. Because he obtained good results with RR21, he had planted it for three years in a row and had not ventured to try any of the newer varieties that had been released. His neighbor planted a newer seed called Kisan and achieved very good yields. But this farmer attributed that yield to the fact that his neighbor owned a small amount ofland and was therefore able to pay more attention to his crops and provide higher doses of inputs for them. There was widespread agreement that the traditional varieties of wheat were much tastier, although only one farmer had planted desi wheat in 1984-85. When the wheat crop was being harvested, Raj Singh, an older thakur and owner of just over six acres of land, was praising an "improved" version of desi wheat called K68. According to Raj Singh, it was a sight to behold, with the grain round and fat, a beautiful white color, and it had an excellent taste; if you saw it heaped along with other piles of grain in the market, it would immediately catch your attention. For this reason, it sold for a higher price than other varieties. Its flour was "nice and white," as were its rotis, and it was genuinely tasty. The problem with K68, he added, was that the stalks were far too tall and thus tended to lodge, or fall down, on windy and rainy days. It was also more responsive to organic manure than chemical fertilizer, a fact that became important in light of the constant complaints in the village "Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy

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Dividers being made in field for irrigation

about the "shortage" of organic manure (this theme is explored at greater length in the following chapter). Another problem was that it needed to be planted relatively early. Because people were growing several crops a year, the fields were not free at an earlier time. The implication was that, apart from difficulties caused by lodging, K68 disturbed the timing of other crops and hence had repercussions that extended beyond the wheat-growing season. To purchase new wheat seeds on the market, one could obtain loans in kind from government agencies to be repayed at the end of the harvest. Loans of this kind were usually made by farmers cooperatives, which were monitored closely by local officials. Suresh told me that he chose not to go through the banks to purchase new seeds because the officials created trouble [gadbadl. The purchase orders approved by bank officials were valid only with particular dealers, with whom the officials had made arrangements in advance. The dealers palmed off old seed and fertilizer to the farmer, which, predictably, failed to perform up to expectations. This, in turn, started a cycle of debt, because the farmer could not afford to pay back all that was required under the terms of the loan. If there was a bad harvest and most of a farmer's crop was lost, he was in deep trouble because, unlike 10-

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cal moneylenders who were flexible in demanding repayment, government officials blindly followed the rules in following repayment schedules. 48 It was not only the fear of debt that prevented farmers from approaching government agencies for seed loans but also the insensitive response of bureaucrats to the importance of getting inputs to the farmer in a timely manner. For example, Suresh complained that the approvals for seed loans were invariably delayed. By the time the bank officials got the orders for the distribution of seed, the best time for sowing was past. He felt that monetary loans would be better than loans in kind. Most people sitting in those offices, he said, have no experience of farming. They would not recognize a head of wheat if they saw it. All they knew was how to shuffle paper. Bureaucrats would not dream of releasing funds before they obtained orders to do so, and by the time the orders came, it was invariably too late for the farmer's crop. They just did not understand the importance of timing in agricultural activities. A consideration of the seed selection process of even a few farmers reveals a complex mix of determinants. The recommendations of trustworthy neighbors and relatives clearly played a central role. On the other hand, one had to test whether the new seeds would "take hold" on one's own land. Many farmers in Alipur tested new seeds on a small portion of their land; if the output was satisfactory, they adopted it wholesale the following year. A new variety was sown as long as results from it were satisfactory and no clearly superior variety was available. Again, the demonstration effect of neighbors was critical, but it was balanced by a careful consideration of the manifold factors that went into high yields. Thus the farmer who saw his neighbor obtaining good yields with the varietal Kisan attributed it not to the variety itself but to the application of large doses of inputs. Although farmers preferred desi wheat for consumption and often rhapsodized about its properties, as well as about the high prices it fetched in the market, they rarely grew it because of its tendency to lodge and because its long growing season disrupted the crops in the previous harvest. The nonavailability of credit was suggested as a factor that played a part in sowing decisions, especially the fact that the timing of credit did not always match that of agricultural production. "Indigenous" know ledges of agronomy, therefore, combined with "satisficing" forms of behavior, a whole host of market factors, and the operation of state offices to determine the selection of seeds. 49

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Sowing

Crops either were sown in straight rows behind a plow or were "broadcast" by taking fistfuls of seed and throwing it across the land. All the major crops in Alipur were sown in straight rows. In sowing operations, two men usually worked together. One operated the plow while the other trailed behind dropping the seed. Working in this way, it was possible to sow approximately one acre in a day. I saw only a couple of farmers broadcasting grain, and they did so because they were desperately late or short oflabor. Creating the furrows for sowing is a delicate operation, requiring the plow to be operated at an angle so that it does not dig in as deep as it does when plowing. Planting the seed too deep might cause it to rot; conversely, planting it too high left the plant vulnerable to lodging. The depth at which seeds were planted was an important factor in accounts of low yields. I asked Suresh why most farmers preferred to do the sowing themselves when they could rent a tractor to sow in a fraction of the time. He replied: I have heard one other thing about tractors, namely that the seed drill [kudil drops the grain somewhat high. So when too much water is applied to it and the wind blows, its roots give way, and the wheat falls over. Often one sees wheat sown by a tractor lodging. With the plow one sows slightly lower than that, the seed reaches a bit low, then it cannot fall. This is one hypothesis held by people, that the tractor places the seed high. So its root slants in this manner, water is applied, the soil gets wet, and it falls over. This is one reason for not using tractors. The second reason is that the tractor owner has to be given cash. To save money, it's good to get by using just the plow. The small farmer works with just his plow. Dhani Singh used almost identical reasoning. He too traced greater lodging to the fact that the seed drill on a tractor deposited the seed higher up in the soil as compared with a bullock plow (three to four inches instead of six inches): "Output will be greater in the bullockplowed one. Why? The reason is that the bullock-plowed seed reaches somewhat deeper. Therefore its roots are firmer. The seeds sown by tractor have higher roots. If the fertilizer is of good quality, and water is applied, later if the wind blows, then the plant will fall, and the result will be lower production." It might appear that this is an argument for planting seeds somewhat deep. But there are also good reasons to ensure that seeds are not placed excessively deep. Dhani Singh accounted for 198

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Sowing

the poor production he obtained from his mustard crop by saying that the seed had been planted too deep. He had plowed the field once, then broadcast the seed, and plowed the field again. The result was that the seed was embedded far too deep into the soil and rotted. Some plants haphazardly pushed through the earth, but even these grew only to a short height and failed to yield any mustard. Several farmers told me that the reason why seeds planted too deep failed to yield anything was that, at a greater depth, they could not obtain the heat that they needed to sprout. Consequently, they rotted from the wetness. On the other hand, planted at the correct height, they received just the right combination of moisture and heat to enable them to grow rapidly. Because different crops varied in their constitution, as did the soil in different plots, the "correct" height at which seeds had to be planted varied. Thus, a skillful farmer used his understanding of humoral agronomy to plant seeds at varying heights and times, depending on the properties of the crop and the soil. Even for a particular crop, there was considerable debate as to what was the correct depth for planting. Contrary to what has been quoted above, the practice of planting the seed relatively high was supported by some farmers by referring to changing practices of irrigation. The depth at which seed was planted depended on a combination of factors related "Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy 199

to the properties of the soil and the increased availability of water. Sompal explained it this way: "It depends on the moistness of the soil. Earlier, there were no sources of water, and people depended on the rains. So the moisture remained lower down, and the seed had to be planted at a greater depth. And now that people irrigate before sowing, the seed should naturally be higher." By 1984-85, tube wells were enabling farmers to irrigate their crops plentifully and relatively inexpensively. Under those circumstances, the argument for planting seed deep was less persuasive. When farmers depended on the rain, it made sense to plant the seed lower down because the soil was more moist the deeper one went. Irrigation made it possible to plant the seed relatively high because the land could be kept wet even in the absence of winter rain. A humoral theory of "adequate" moisture was thus employed to assess the significance of tube wells on the depth of planting. Apart from the failure to plant seed at the right height, the chief impediment to high yields mentioned most often in my interviews was the failure to sow on time. Despite irrigating his wheat crop six times, Suresh's output was poor. When I questioned him about it, he told me that the main reason for low yields was that he had been late in planting. Even though water and fertilizer had been put in a timely manner, planting late had prevented the crop from being a good one. Suresh told me that to assure a good output, one needed to plant on time and provide adequate amounts of fertilizer and water. All three things were necessary for a good harvest. An additional factor that affected the timing of sowing was the availability of labor. Suresh was delayed because he and his sons fell ill at the critical period when the field had to be plowed and sowed. Sowing time was one period when finding hired labor became more difficult than normal, although these shortages were minimal compared with those at harvesting and threshing, when labor was short despite the fact that wage rates were at their annual peak. From my interviews, the reasons cited most often for the success of sowing were the timing as well as the depth at which the seed had been planted. The depth at which seed was planted depended on the technology of plowing-that is, whether tractors or bullocks were used-and the technology of irrigation-that is, whether the land had access to tube well water. Evaluations about the interrelation of techniques of planting, depth of planting, and irrigation depended on humoral agronomical knowledges. The most interesting aspect of the new technologies of irrigation and plowing was how they entered into sharply conflictual assessments of sowing. Thus, different farmers could not agree 200

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as to the "proper" depth of planting seed because they accounted for tractors and tube wells in very different ways. As with crop choice, field preparation, and the selection of seeds, the new technologies of agriculture had crucially altered Alipur farmers' decisions about sowing. The depth at which seed should have been planted, the technology (tractors or bullock-driven plows) that should have been used, and the timing of planting were all determined by a mixed set of explanations drawn from humoral agronomy, the exigencies of household cash and labor supplies, the properties of these machines, and the access that individuals had to them. Tractors, tube wells, and hybrid seeds were the emblems of the green revolution, the revolution that would make agriculture and the nation modern, self-sufficient, productive, developed. A close examination of the micro techniques of agriculture shows the extent to which epistemologies and practices of farming had been shaped by the hybridities that characterize postcolonial conditions. Weeding

"Weeding once is worth two coats of fertilizer," a farmer in Alipur told me, emphasizing the importance of this activity. Once the crops were sown, they had to be periodically weeded and irrigated. This was time consuming but could be done over a period of days by the entire family. For most crops, a small hand hoe was used. The person weeding would squat in the field, grab the offending plant with one hand, use the hoe in the other to dig up its roots, and then put it in an improvised bag slung around the waist. It was an extremely labor-intensive procedure but, compared with the use of herbicide, ecologically benign. It was not unusual to see entire families-men, women, and children-weeding together. Hired labor was almost never used for weeding purposes. Because "weeds" were used as green fodder for cattle, the speed of weeding was regulated by the need for fodder. People usually started from one corner of their plot and stopped when they had collected enough green fodder for that day's feed. The following day, they began weeding from where they had left off. Suresh had weeded both his maize and bajra crop twice, whereas the normal practice would have been to weed maize more than bajra. Asked about the importance of weeding, he clarified that the weeds [kharpatvaar] would have competed for nutrients [tatv] with the maize, resulting in a weak crop. He speculated that not weeding might have reduced output to as little as half of normal. No fixed number of weedings was "Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy

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A family weeding their plot

considered "necessary"; the number of times one weeded depended on the plot. Full production could be obtained only if the fields were cleaned every time weeds appeared. After sowing, it took fifteen or twenty days for the plant to grow enough for four or five leaves to appear. That signaled the right time to begin the first weeding. One of the advantages of using the hand hoe was that it turned the soil and made it more fertile. Thus, if it rained immediately after one had weeded or if the field was irrigated soon after, the soil retained moisture better and did not dry out rapidly. The next step, according to Suresh, came after the maize plant was a little bigger. And then after this when the knot explodes [gaanth phutthil, when the ear [kukdil emerges, when the maize leaf comes out, then it is very important to weed. It is extremely necessary because we people have estimated [andazl that it is only because of the heat that the leaf emerges from the green plant. From below, we will weed it, make it dry [khushkil. The sun's light will fall on it from the top, then maize will come out from the entire plant. When the maize is ready to come out, at that very time we weed it, and at that very time apply potent [urvarakl fertilizer-urea, or whatever fertilizer one wants to apply.

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Clearly, the most forceful notion operating behind this explanation is the humoral reasoning that a burst of "heat" will push the growth of the plant in the crucial stage of cob production. Weeding both cleared the ground of other plants that were competing with the maize plant for nutrients and turned the soil over, thus further drying it. At the same time, a potent fertilizer like urea, which was considered extremely hot and dry, would accelerate the process. Once again, the timing of the application of chemical fertilizers was based on a humoral logic about the life stage of the plant as well as an understanding of the properties of that fertilizer. Suresh told me regretfully that in his own fields only half the plants bore cobs because he did not have the money to apply fertilizer and the late rains did not allow sufficient time for the entire plot to be weeded. Suresh told me that if he had had the money to apply fertilizer, he would have applied one coat at the time of sowing, another one after the first time the corn was weeded, and a second dose when the cob first emerged. Those who did not apply fertilizer at the time of sowing applied it after the crop was weeded the second time. Bajra did not need to be weeded as often as maize, because after weeding it twice, it became so tall and grew so dense that one was unable to squat in the field without damaging the crop. So the right time to weed was when the first leaves emerged and then after two or three weeks. And if the field had been plowed a larger number of times to prepare it for sowing, then it could be weeded just once, and that too would be sufficient for bajra. The term sometimes used for weeding was "dressing" the field [khayt sajaanal. 50 "Sajaana" suggests "to make beautiful" or "to adorn." Thus apart from its instrumental effects of being "worth two coats of fertilizer," weeding also had an important function in the aesthetics of farming. Was the use of this phrase related in any way to the visual differences between agriculture before and after the introduction of green revolution wheat? Even in 1984-85, farmers in Alipur typically intercropped several minor crops into a major one: thus mustard was normally grown in the raised mounds that separated plots of wheat; a number of smaller crops were typically raised in corn; and sugarcane too had minor crops grown between the rows. Some farmers suggested that raiSing crops in rows, a practice deemed necessary in "scientific" agriculture to maximize the efficiency of inputs, was a relatively recent practice in Alipur and may have become "normal" only after the introduction of high-yielding varieties. "Modern" farming, with crops growing in straight lines, had its own aesthetic in which heavily intercropped plots

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appeared hopelessly haphazard and unkempt. Was this judgment incorporated in describing the uprooting of weeds as "adorning" the field?51 Explanations of the need for weeding and of the speed at which it was done were therefore composed of a balance between considerations that emerged from a humoral understanding of the effects of weeding and those from the household's requirements for fodder and from the substitution effects of plowing. Suresh's account, for example, drew on humoral agronomy and from a particle theory of matter. Irrigation

Tube wells had enabled the farmers of Alipur to grow multiple crops in a year. Most farmers grew at least two, and those with good sources of water and ample supplies of household labor sometimes grew as many as four crops in an annual cycle. Of the two main growing seasons, tube wells were used mostly for supplementary purposes during the kharif growing season; by contrast, the rabi crop relied heavily on this relatively new technology. 52 Tube wells are so named because they consist of a thin pipe that is sunk into the ground and attached to a pump on the surface. In Alipur, the water level in 1984-85 stood at a mere thirty-six to forty-two feet. The pipe on the surface pumped water into a small holding area, from where it was distributed by gravity flow to small irrigation canals. Fields were partitioned into rectangular plots by building embankments a few inches high to separate them from one another. Then, the irrigation canal was "cut" to allow water into one plot until it was saturated and so forth until the entire field had been irrigated. Getting the job done was a challenge under conditions of uncertain electric supply. Most tube wells in Alipur were electrically powered; hence irrigation could be accomplished only when there was electricity. In 1984-85, the supply of electricity alternated between days in one week and nights in the next. But there were often times when there was no electricity at all, either because there was no supply in the grid or because a local transformer had burned out. If, for instance, the electric supply suddenly stopped after water had been pumped for an hour and only two-thirds of the first rectangular plot had received water, then when the supply resumed the patch that had been previously irrigated would have to be saturated again before the water reached the unirrigated portion of the plot. Thus, stop-and-start electric supply extracted a high price in terms of the inefficient utilization of water. One of the advantages of tube wells was that people had started to 204

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Tube well powered by diesel pump set

plant crops before the first monsoon downpour, whereas previously they had to wait for the rains. However, although widespread, this practice was not considered desirable by everyone. In the first week of July, after a long, excruciatingly hot, and seemingly unending summer, I talked to different individuals about the effect of monsoon rains on the crops. The monsoons had teased us the previous week, providing a sprinkling instead of the sheets of rain that announced the beginning of the rainy season. We could feel the moisture in the hot air, the wind would even pick up on occasion, but the rain stayed frustratingly out of reach, testing our patience. Walking back on the main road from the village to the farm where I lived, I had to pass by the small, thatched hut of an impoverished brahmin family. They were so poor that the eldest son, Hukum, had to work on a long-term wage contract with a politically powerful thakur family as, in effect, an indentured laborer. The younger son managed the family's own land while the elder tried to raise some cash for inputs. In the evening, on my way back to my room, I saw Hukum on the side of the road, and we started talking about the lack of rainfall and the state of the crops. Hukum announced that he believed that one good monsoon rain was equivalent to irrigating four times with a tube well. The plants started growing only after the monsoons and would shoot up rapidly "Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy

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once the rains arrived. He pointed to some fodder growing on the side of his plot and said that if the rains had come, they would have grown up to his chest, but because the monsoon had been delayed, they had not been doing so well. As we were talking, another young man, Devendra, came by and joined our conversation. Devendra was an enterprisingjat whose family was widely considered to be the richest in Alipur. Devendra expressed the wish that the rains be delayed by a few more days. He had already had to replant his maize once because of the light sprinkling of rain the previous week. Instead of soaking the soil, the rain had wet the soil enough to form a hard crust that the new seedlings had been unable to pierce. Thus, he had sown maize for a second time. If it did not rain the following week, the seedlings would break through the ground, and then the timing and amount of rainfall would matter less. If it rained heavily, the whole ground would be soft, and the seedlings would easily come up through the moist soil. But if it rained lightly once again, the same problem would arise and most of the plants would stay inside the ground, thus yielding a poor output. Most of all, it was the uncertainty of rainfall that was harmful. Many farmers had lost even the second round of maize because the heat that year had proved to be too intense for the young shoots. Only very heavy rain would have cooled the land enough and provided the moisture necessary for a good harvest. One difference between a crop such as maize and a millet like bajra was that the former required regular irrigation. Suresh emphaSized the importance of water to me: "For all crops, it's necessary to get water on time-for maize as well as for bajra. Whenever the crop needs water, then it should be given. Maize too demands water. If there is no rain, and the clouds go away sometimes in the middle of the monsoons [sawanl, it gets dry. Then we apply water to the maize from our electric tube wells. Bajra stays put for many days, although it reduces the output, but maize dries completely. [Without water 1 a little bit of bajra is still produced." The ability of bajra to withstand irregular irrigation made it a favorite among people with poor access to irrigation water. This included farmers who had no tube well, who did not have the resources to purchase irrigation water from neighbors, or who did not have neighbors who were willing to sell water to them. In the winter harvest, those with inconsistent access to water resources chose to grow barley rather than wheat for much the same reason. Suresh stressed that barley should not be irrigated more than four times, as compared with a desired six or seven irrigations for wheat. 206

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I received one irrigation late anyway and more than four irrigations should not be applied for the reason that barley does not grow with much water. In barley, more water is not needed because when its head is quite big, when its shape is fully determined, then if water is given, it is good. This water carries over, the plant doesn't dry out. If there is a shortage of water, barley doesn't dry but keeps growing like bajra. Whereas wheat will wilt. It affects wheat a great deal if water is not given. Barley is not so sensitive. It ripens in less time, whereas wheat takes more time to ripen because it is irrigated more. Timing was of crucial importance. It was not only that wheat had to be irrigated a greater number of times but also that it was "less forgiving" if water was not applied at the right time. Barley "allowed" greater leeway as long as it was irrigated once soon after the head of grain first emerged. The length of the growing season was of great consequence here. Frequent irrigation was required in the last three weeks to a month before wheat was harvested. This was when the heat began to get more intense, the days lengthened, and the crop risked drying out if its need for water was not closely monitored. By harvest time, in the first half of April, the sun was blazing. Harvesting was done early in the morning and in the late afternoon. Not even people used to the heat dared to be out in the fields between ten and three in the middle of the day. The fact that barley was harvested earlier quite significantly correlated to its lower "demand" for irrigation water. In speaking thus of the crop as possessing the "ability" to withstand irregular irrigation, of being "less forgiving" or "needing" or "demanding" water, I employ the same vocabulary as that used by farmers in Alipur. In this view, crops are not conceptualized as inert objects that are acted on by external "forces" such as human beings and the weather but as possessing a constitution, needs, and desires. Despite the lower demands for water made by barley and its relatively forgiving nature if irrigation was inadequate, timing was critical not only to stave off disastrous outcomes but also to obtain good yields. Suresh explained the sequence in which the four irrigations should be applied to barley. One in the beginning for when the field is sown. The second irrigation when the plant begins to progress, when it pushes out of the soil. And the third irrigation is applied when it starts growing upward, when the plant becomes approximately one foot or one"Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy

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half foot. Then the field itself tells you, the leaves shrivel-water is applied then. Three irrigations are done! The fourth irrigation is applied when hair emerges from the head. It should be irrigated then because fairly long hair emerges by applying water. But water should not be applied on ripening; otherwise, the barley will lodge and turn yellow. It will no longer stay white. Why? Because of steam from the ground. Or the plant is uprooted because the soil becomes soft from the water. That's how barley becomes yellow and weak. So for this reason, it does not need water on ripening. If it rains, the barley will get spoiled too. The chance of rain late in the harvest season, when the barley was almost ripe, was rather small. The danger, therefore, was not as much from a freak rainstorm as from an inexperienced farmer, who might irrigate the barley when it was ripe. That could be disastrous because the hot and wet atmosphere provided by the water would cause the grain to turn yellow. By upsetting the humoral balance, excessively moist heat damaged the quality and shine of the grain and gave it a sickly, yellow appearance. If not that, then the soil became so soft that the plant lodged in the stiff breeze prevalent at harvest time. The most interesting feature of 5uresh's exposition was that the correct times for different irrigations were all indicated with reference to the stages of the plant's growth, rather than by dates on the calendar, the days from sowing, or the interval between stages. In fact, a crucial irrigation, the third, depended entirely on the land announcing a need: "The field itself tells yoU."53 The notion of wetness was consistently used to estimate the appropriate time to irrigate a crop, the goal being to maintain the appropriate balance of moistness at all stages of the plant's growth. 5uresh, for example, attempted to steer between the extremes of the leaves shriveling and the grain becoming yellow. With reference to his mustard crop, 5uresh told me that the third and final irrigation was applied after the mustard was ready to ripen. The water entered the mustard seed and made it plump. "After flowering, when it starts becoming a pod, then apply water once. It's not applied during flowering because if water is applied to the flower, the flower at once sheds and then the pod cannot form." But why did irrigating the plant in its flowering phase cause it to shed? Again, the explanation was offered in humoral terms: "When water is applied below, then rot is produced in the flower because of the wetness of the water. From above, it receives heat. The flower is extremely delicate so it sheds its petals and 208

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falls. So it affects the crop, the output, because pods cannot form. If water is administered only when it is ready to form seed, then the seed will form completely." The flower possessed a finely tuned and easily disturbed "constitution." In its flowering phase, the plant was at an exceedingly delicate stage of its life cycle, and extra precautions had to be taken to maintain the proper balance of elements required for good health. Excessive wetness, combined with the sun's heat, would have disturbed the fine balance required for the flower to survive. The logic of explanation of indigenous knowledges, therefore, imposed on their practitioners a pattern of timing with regard to their agricultural activities. The growth and health of the plant, understood in relation to humoral categories and explanations, thus determined the timing and frequency of the application of water. At the same time, farmers in Alipur also discussed irrigation in relation to the properties of electric pumps and the design of tube wells. Because the method of irrigation employed was gravity flow, an intimate knowledge of the topography of the land was essential to understand differences in the output of crops. Talking to one another, villagers in Alipur did not use directional indicators to refer to places within a field. For example, instead of saying "at the southwest comer of the plot," they were more likely to say "the lower part of the field." One had to know not only where a particular peasant's fields were but also its microtopography. I frequently found myself clueless on encountering statements about location that were obviously very meaningful to everyone else. For instance, I once asked Dhani Singh why he obtained a yield of only 3'/4 mans/bigha in his wheat crop, whereas others in the village had obtained yields of twice as much, despite the fact that he had irrigated it no less than six times. He replied patiently: "So how does it matter? That field comes down like this-it's a sloping field. For example, if this [gesturingl is a flat [eksaarl field, then the water will fill it equally. So the production will be okay. And those fields that are like this [indicates slopel, the field can drink only as long as the water is flowing [chaltaa rahegaal. All the water goes down the slope. The production on the higher side is killed." And was there a technique to overcome this problem? The only method that he could suggest was to take a leveling board and attempt to level the field as much as possible. Obviously, all fields had some slope, otherwise gravity irrigation would not work. However, Dhani Singh was pointing to the negative effects of a field tilted at too steep an angle. The higher ends of such a field could not retain enough moisture to support a good wheat crop. An intimate "Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy

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Plots are irrigated by gravity flow in small segments

knowledge of the quality of the soil and the topography of the field was thus essential for decisions about what kinds of crops to grow, how much fertilizer and water to give them, and when to supply inputs. Humoral theories relating to "wetness" were thus woven into explanations about the timing of irrigation, the number of irrigations provided, the resistance of particular crops to shortages of water, and the topography of fields. An understanding of the relationship between irrigation, crops, and land was not limited to that which could be provided by humoral agronomy but combined with other factors. The fate of the crop did not depend merely on what was done to it; it too had an active role to play. The crops and fields had dispositions and needs and made demands: a crop could be "forgiving" for being supplied irrigation unevenly; the field itself told the farmer when it needed water; and a sharply sloping field could "kill" the crop by "drinking" water unevenly. In the last section of this chapter, I demonstrate the political contexts for irrigation decisions in order to complicate the "readings" presented here even further. Fertilizer use

In 1984-85, chemical fertilizers were used by practically all farmers in Alipur, except those few who were too poor to afford them. Fertilizer was not applied uniformly to all crops, being used much more heavily 210

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for the main cash crops-wheat, sugarcane, and mustard-and less for other crops. Three types of fertilizer were most frequently employed: diammonium phosphate, popularly called "Di" or DAPj NPK (a mixture of sodium, phosphate, and potassium); and urea, a nitrogenous fertilizer that was by far the most popular. Fertilizer could be applied either at the time of sowing or later on, when the crop was growing. For those who could afford it, DAP was the preferred fertilizer to sow with (called the basal dressing), although NPK was also used. Urea was almost always employed as top dressing. Most farmers in Alipur applied at least one top dressing in wheat and sometimes two, but very rarely did they apply urea three times. I was questioning Suresh about the amount of urea he had applied in his wheat crop. Why had he used 8 kglbigha and not more? (The modal amount was 10 kg/bigha; those well off used even more.) He replied: "The VLW [village-level worker) has told us that the diet [khuraak) for one acre is one sack DAP and two sacks urea. 54 This is what we have been told for wheat. He has also told us the calculations for nitrogen in terms of sacks, that so much percentage nitrogen should be present. All I know is a rough [mota-mota) approximation: sow one sack DAP on one acre and apply two sacks of urea as a top dressing at two different times. I just keep the broad principles [mota-mota sidhaant) in mind."55 I reminded Suresh that he had not actually stuck to these broad principles, for he had used only one sack of urea instead of the two recommended. He replied that they had not been able to afford more fertilizer at that time. He continued: "I also believed that there is some manure lying here that will have a positive effect, so why waste money? For this reason, we didn't put more fertilizer." The superiority of organic manure to chemical fertilizer was a common theme in the discourse of farmers in Alipur. In fact, chemical fertilizers were considered a poor replacement for manure, resorted to only because of the lack of adequate supplies of the latter. Thus, Suresh's justification for not using additional fertilizer was not at all unusual, although he clearly did not have the resources to purchase more chemical fertilizer even if he had wanted to do so. One of the reasons manure was considered so effective was that farmers believed that it released its heat slowly, thus imparting strength to the soil over a period of three years. 56 In a humoral agronomy, the effectiveness of fertilizer was a consequence of the "heat" it imparted to the plant. Heat pushed the plants upward, providing the energy necessary for growth. The difference between chemical fertilizer and organic manure was that the former released its heat all at once and with great intensity, whereas the latter released its heat slowly "Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy

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over several years. Suresh's account thus freely combined recommendations based on the need to supply a certain amount of nitrogen, translated by means of a rough approximation into so many sacks per acre, with a humoral theory that encouraged the substitution of manure for chemical fertilizer. Such vigorous eclecticism is not terribly unusual in South Asia, as numerous studies of the use of healing practices have demonstrated (Leslie 1992; Obeyesekere 1992; Trawick 1992). However, it is not merely the fact that farmers in Alipur relied on radically different, or perhaps incommensurable, prescriptions for agricultural practice that makes this such an interesting case. Rather, as I will presently demonstrate, it is that biochemical inputs were simultaneously incorporated into a humoral agronomy and retained within a "scientific" discourse whose autonomy was recognized and maintained. Contrary to some of the functionalist assumptions of theories of "indigenous knowledge," it was not only knowledges compatible with the "indigenous system" that found widespread acceptance. In fact, as noted above, very few of the connotations of "systemness"-coherence, order, some stable relation between parts, functionality, and clear boundaries-could be found in this case. For example, Suresh explained the difference between diammonium phosphate and NPK in this way: turns out to be good. Why? At the time of sowing, DAP gives the seed enough heat for the plant to maintain itself till the very end. NPK cannot manage to give as much heat as DAP. This is what's special about Di, OAP. SO OAP is better compared with NPK while sowing. On top, we put nothing else, only urea. Ammonium sulphate is applied only in maize. But now everyone applies urea. The vw [village-level worker] tells us that increasing the growth of the plant requires nitrogen. Thus, when the plant begins to grow, then just give urea as the top dressing, that's what they say. We have sown phosphate below. For growth, give it urea. The phosphate gives it heat. As the hen gives heat to its egg by sitting on it, so OAP gives heat to the seed, then the production is good. And to make that plant grow on top, as a top dressing urea works. Urea makes it grow, DAP makes it sprout. For this reason, the crop is good with both things. DAP

Suresh here effortlessly switched back and forth from the "scientifically" based recommendations of the VLW to "indigenous" knowledges based in a humoral agronomy. The analogy with the hen "natu212

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ralized" chemical fertilizer so that it appeared integral to the production process rather than a fairly recent innovation. Basal and top dressings of fertilizer played very different roles in the life of the plant: the fertilizer planted with the seed gave it the heat required to make it sprout, whereas top dressings made the plant gain height-that is, "shoot up." However important top dressing may have been to the growth of the plant, one had to be careful about using too much of it. Sompal Singh, the thakur introduced at the beginning of this chapter, explained why: "If you put more fertilizer, barley will grow taller. When it grows tall and you irrigate it, there is the danger of it falling. If the standing barley lodges, the production will be lower. So thinking this, one can't put too much fertilizer." Urea, the intensely hot and dry fertilizer used as top dressing, caused the stalk of the plant to grow too much. Irrigation, which was then necessary, increased its wetness and pliability, thus making it more vulnerable to lodging on a windy day. From these explanations of agricultural practice in Alipur, it should be clear that biochemical agriculture is not merely "translated" into an indigenous system, which has merely incorporated new elements into an old structure of oppositions and correspondences. Rather, what one finds is that farmers draw on diverse modes of explanation simultaneously, combining in sometimes startling and ingenious ways modes of thought that cannot be recuperated into an analytically neat "whole." Wind

One factor that made an important difference to the growth of plants was the wind. Explanations of good output (or, conversely, of poor output) frequently depended on the direction and timing of the wind. If there were periods of gusty wind immediately after the final irrigation, for example, the crop would lodge, and output would be low. On the other hand, some crops needed to be exposed to the wind to give adequate yields. The wind did not merely serve to dry the moisture in the stalks (that function was largely attributed to the sun) but also was a factor that, like heat and moisture, was inherently necessary for crop growth. As Kurin (1983) has pointed out, air is considered one of the primary constituents of matter and is accordingly considered an input in a sense that is absent in "Western" agronomy. For example, one of the really important factors in getting good yields from lentils was to plant them far enough apart that the wind could pass through the rows. Sompal explained why he had obtained such a poor yield in these terms: "When the wind doesn't pass through "Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy

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Winnowing mustard

it, how can the pods emerge? They only come out on top, on a little bit of the stalk. If the lentil Carhar) is sparsely planted, then it gets pods all around because it's exposed on all four sides." Sompal had broadcast arhar instead of planting it in rows. Lacking experience in farming, he had used too much seed per unit of land. As a result, the arhar plants grew very close to one another. Urea helped them grow, but they yielded very few lentils. So Sompal harvested mainly firewood from the lentil crop, getting pods only from the very tops of the plant, which were exposed to the wind. It may seem that I have overlooked the obvious explanation that the injunction to allow the "wind to pass" between the rows is simply a means to ensure that the lentils are planted in rows and spaced far enough apart. But this example really points to a class of explanations in which the direction and timing of the wind is held to be responsible for certain consequences. Thus, the reason a crop did badly might be explained by the untimely presence of "gusts from the south" or "unusually hot winds" and so on. Unlike Sompal, Narain was an experienced farmer, considered one of the best in the village. He attributed his superior farming skills to the fact that he had grown up on a farm and, additionally, had learned quite a few things from the various government farms on which he had served. Narain was technically a civil servant and was employed full214

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time on the government seed farm in Alipur. But he also did his own farming by renting in land from someone in the village. Narain managed what was the equivalent of two full-time jobs with a great degree of skill, doing just enough work on the government farm to get by and devoting his prodigious energy to getting good outputs on the farm that he had rented. He proudly told me that every piece of land that he had rented had yielded superior output because he never skimped on inputs. By the time his wheat would be harvested, he would have irrigated it nine times. "Can you find another farmer in the village who has put as much water in their wheat as me?" he inquired. Not even those who owned their own tube wells could match that figure. In the previous year (1984), however, Narain's crop had not been as good as he expected. Interestingly enough, the explanation he offered for that fact was that an ill wind had affected it [buri havaa lag gayeeJ. A similar incident involving the effects of malevolent winds was recollected by a group of farmers on another occasion. This was the year of India's first atomic explosion in the neighboring state of Rajasthan, which they variously dated as 1974-75 and 1978. 57 They said that the crop that year was destroyed because of the effects of the radiation. The farmers claimed that, as a consequence of the explosion, "ill winds blew

Threshing wheat with an electrically powered machine; women play an important role in postharvest operations

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our way and destroyed our crops." They found very little grain inside the pods. In each bundle of cut grain for the bullocks to stamp (for threshing), there were hardly one or two mans of grain, whereas there should have been at least fifteen. Some of the farmers with whom I talked claimed that the government had deliberately suppressed the news of the bad effects of the explosion, and they were hence unable to estimate the extent to which the explosion had damaged the crops. Once again, we find an almost stereotypical instance of indigenous knowledge-the importance of the wind in humoral agronomyrendered unstable by its imbrication in modernist discourses about the nation-state. The effects of an ill wind are almost uniformly recognized, but the sources of the ill wind are in dispute. Is it the weather or the desperate efforts of the postcolonial nation-state to assert itself as a world power? Rather than ironically juxtaposing the scientific achievement of modernity symbolized by the atomic bomb explosion with the traditionalism of hapless farmers talking about malevolent winds, I suggest that the two phenomena are intimately linked in the consciousness of farmers themselves. The residents of Alipur knew that the atomic bomb was connected to the "development" of their nation. Even without an awareness of exactly what the atomic bomb was, they recognized it as a symbol of "progress" toward that exalted state of "development" that they, as citizens of a poor nation, were aspiring toward. At the same time, in connecting the ill winds to the power of the atomic bomb, Alipur's farmers displayed an understanding of the destructive potential of modernity, as well as a disturbingly clear assessment that it was people like them who would have to pay the price of "progress." From "Indigenous Knowledge" to the Politics of Practice

What alternative descriptions might one provide for the agricultural practices portrayed above? It has already been hinted that "indigenous knowledge" is an inadequate basis for understanding agriculture in AIipur. What other forms of explanation-hybridized, incommensurable, mistranslated-might be necessary for a better understanding of farming in a postcolonial setting? In this section I argue that a move away from explanations that rely on the alterity of "indigenous knowledge" to those that embrace contradictory and perhaps unremarkable combinations (ranging from the imperatives of market prices, responsibility to the family, caste solidarity, and humoral agronomy) is a necessary step 216

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in order to understand the epistemologies and practices of farmers in postcolonial settings. To go from knowledges to practices is also to shift from cognitive conceptions of culture toward those which emphasize the embodied and enacted realities of the postcolonial condition. My goal in this section is to take a few instances to clarify this point and to deepen the explanations offered already. Dhani Singh and his brother jointly owned one of the few tube wells on the far side of the Mandi road. In one detailed interview with Dhani Singh about his farming practices, he explained why he had not planted a high-yielding variety. A new variety, he said, would suffer if it was insufficiently irrigated. I expressed astonishment that a person who owned a tube well could conceivably have a problem with water. This is what he said: "We both have a problem with water, and to some extent, we don't. What is the reason for this? The reason is that a two-hundredbigha area nearby has come under the command of our tube well. So we have to fulfill their needs toO."58 But why couldn't he fulfill his needs first before selling water to other neighbors? Because a system for sharing water allocated particular days to particular fields [vaar pad jaaten hainl. Agreements to purchase water were typically made at the beginning of the cropping season. It was decided in advance who would get water on a particular day of the week. 59 Given the erratic and highly uncertain supply of electricity, it was possible that a particular field that was to be irrigated every Wednesday, for example, might not receive any water for two successive weeks. Even the owner of the well, as in the case of Dhani Singh, might have found himself in that situation. Although Dhani Singh, as the owner of his own tube well, was "free" not to share water with his neighbors, there were other models of water sharing in Alipur. Three farmers had split the expenses for a tube well, two of them having put in a quarter share and the third having put in a half. Water from the tube well was allocated by turns: three days to each of the two minor partners, followed by six days for the major partner. All three owned farms of roughly the same size, so the quarter partners were at a distinct disadvantage as compared with the one who owned half. But all of them were assured water at least once every nine days, again depending on the supply of electricity. There was, of course, a solution to the unpredictability of the supply of electricity: to purchase a diesel pump set as a substitute for the electric motor. The diesel pump was more expensive to operate but it could be used at any time. Dhani Singh had considered purchasing a diesel engine, but at that time, there were conflicts in his family. AI"Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy

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though I never did find out the source of this conflict, I gathered that it had to do with his elder brother's dissatisfaction with the sharing of the proceeds of farming. Dhani Singh's father was elderly and frail; rather than waiting until his father's death, as often was the case, to split the property among the three brothers, Dhani Singh's elder brother wanted his share of the property to be partitioned. That way he could move out of the joint household and save the income from farming his share of the property for his own nuclear family. The existing tube well fell in the elder brother's part of the property. If his elder brother paid them half the price of the tube well, Dhani Singh told me, they would use that money to install their own diesel pump set. But the elder brother gave no sign of buying out his share of the old tube well. So things stood as they were, with no prospects for change on the horizon. One response to the unpredictability of the water supply was to change the crop mix. Sompal Singh, the thakur who was an inexperienced farmer, explained that he decided to grow barley instead of wheat because it required less irrigation. The specific actions taken by farmers in Alipur to combat the erratic supply of water relied on an understanding of the health of crops derived from humoral agronomyfor example, which crops were inherently hotter and wetter and would therefore do well with less irrigation or which crops were able to maintain their moisture for a long time and could sustain long periods of dryness with minimal loss of output. Humoral theories blended into explanations about social obligations and family politics to suggest why, for example, Dhani Singh did not irrigate his wheat more often or install a new tube well. An explanation based entirely on "indigenous knowledge" would be unlikely to account for this case. The pattern of irrigation employed by Dhani Singh was informed by both an understanding of the health of his crops derived from a humoral agronomy and, to the extent that they affected his ability to obtain water, negotiations with neighbors and conflicts within his family. Such a conclusion emerges particularly forcefully in the case of Sompal Singh, who owned a not insubstantial piece of property-about twenty-eight bighas-on the western side of the village. But instead of farming his own land, which he had rented to someone else, he chose to cultivate a small plot rented from his father. Once, walking toward a distant grove in search of mangoes, I asked him about this unusual arrangement. I was unprepared for Sompal's intensely emotional response, which revealed his troubled relationship with his parents. Although Sompal lived in the same home as his parents, he did not live 218

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with them. The family home had been partitioned into two spaces, each with a separate hearth, an act that had crucial symbolic significance. As the middle of three brothers, Sompal felt that his parents treated him unfairly, giving him neither the privileges afforded the elder, who lived in his wife's village, nor the attention given the younger. These problems were evident in the handling of the family land. His parents owned sixty bighas (approximately nine and a half acres) in Alipur and an equal amount of land in his mother's village. The land in his mother's village had already been given to the eldest brother; now, the elder brother was insisting that what remained in Alipur be split equally among the three brothers, which Sompal thought would be unfair. His father had held on to most of the land, postponing the inevitable decision, but had already given Sompal a little less than half the total. Although his father had leased Sompal some land in 1984-85, he had refused to do so earlier, instead preferring to lease it to other people. He knew that Sompal did not have any other source of employment, yet he continually turned down Sompal's requests to lease additional land. When Sompal tried to cultivate sugarcane on the part of the land that he had leased, his father flatly told him that he could not expect to rent the land the following year and therefore should not plant an annual crop such as sugarcane. Sompal's disillusionment with his parents stemmed from the periods shortly after the birth of his first child and his youngest daughter. Each of the two children had fallen seriously ill, and Sompal had no source of income on both occasions. He requested some monetary help from his parents but was rebuffed. "My parents could very well afford to spend some money on my sick children and my wife, but they just refused to do so. Now, even when I feel sorry when I see myoId father toiling in the fields and sometimes think I should go and help him, my feelings refuse to assist me. My heart doesn't go out to him at all." Sompal's voice cracked as he spoke, reliving the bitterness and disappointments of the past. We walked silently for a while, the space between us heavy with this revelation, listening to the steady clatter of the bicycle that he was pushing with one hand. Sompal proceeded to tell me that his parents had spent a lot of money paying for the treatment of his elder brother, who had been seriously ill for the previous two years. He did not grudge the fact that his parents were looking after his elder brother; what really hurt him was the fact that they had discriminated against him.60 Sompal explained his rather unusual situation (of renting in property from his father while renting out his own land) by telling me that the main reason why he rented out his own property was that he had no "Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy

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ready access to irrigation. The tube well that supplied irrigation water to his field was owned by Sher Singh, with whom he was on polite, but distinctly cool, terms. 61 Operating his own fields would have placed him in a position requiring frequent contact and exchanges with Sher Singh, exchanges, moreover, in which he would be in a weaker, dependent position. For this reason, he preferred to rent out his property, earning a combination of up-front cash and, at the end of the year, a fixed quantity of the wheat harvest. 62 His tenant had to be a person who could get along well with Sher Singh. More often than not, Sher Singh himself chose the tenant and brought him to Sompal for approval. Sompal felt comfortable with this procedure because if later there were conflicts between his tenant and Sher Singh, he did not need to get involved on behalf of his tenant, as might reasonably have been expected of a landlord. On their part, prospective tenants knew that Sher Singh was the person who could get them land to lease. In tum, Sher Singh carefully looked for a man who had young, unwed daughters with whom he could enjoy sexual liaisons. A complex triangular relation was thus set up between Sompal, the tenant, and Sher Singh. Sher Singh's ability to use his tube well as a source of power forms an interesting contrast with the case of Dhani Singh mentioned earlier. Dhani Singh was unable to use his tube well to irrigate his own fields in a timely manner because he was "bound" by the arrangement made with his neighbors to share water with them. Therefore his ownership of the means of production-that is, the tube well-did not, by itself, enable him to exert control over others either directly or through their recruitment as clients. Sher Singh's importance in village politics flowed, as I have argued in the previous chapter, from the intersection of his class position and his status as a broker by virtue of the "contacts" he had in the state bureaucracy. The importance of his class position, in fact, is what enabled him to convert ownership of the means of production into political power through his ability to recruit clients and establish his pOSition as village strongman. By contrast, Dhani Singh was unable to push people around. His family had arrived in the village only a few years ago and occupied a peripheral position in every sense of the term-politically, socially, and in terms of prestige. 63 He had to establish a bank of goodwill that could be drawn on for the sort of everyday conflicts that frequently afflicted families in the village. Thus, even though it sometimes had adverse effects on his own farming, he had "no choice" but to distribute the sale of irrigation water in a regular and socially acceptable manner. 220

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The politics of agricultural decisions illustrated through this contrast between Sher Singh and Dhani Singh adds a further twist to the consideration of "indigenousness" pursued through the detailed discussion of specific agricultural practices. It reminds us of the importance of not overlooking structural inequalities in discussions of hybridity. Although neither Sher Singh's nor Dhani Singh's agricultural practices could be explained solely with reference to indigenous knowledge and even though both farmers were interpellated by the discourses of a developmentalist nation-state, the significantly different structural positions they occupied had enormous consequences for their everyday lives. In Alipur, caste-specific practices provided an important, articulated marker for underlining social distinctions. One of the most important mechanisms by which caste was naturalized was with reference to the activities of women in different caste groups. For instance, whereas women from the thakur households rarely ventured outside the home and were not allowed to do any work in the fields, jat women worked alongside their husbands and fathers at almost all agricultural tasks. 64 This does not imply that thakur women did not make an important contribution to agricultural activities-a lot of the postharvest work was done inside the house. Nevertheless, the restriction that they could not work in the fields did constrain the household labor supply in crucial ways. Interestingly, the mechanization of postharvest operations further reduced their importance and pulled more severely on the cash reserves of these households. 65 An interesting case of the manner in which class status and caste ranking combined to influence agricultural action is provided by Sompal. Forced to rent out his own land, Sompal preferred to remain unemployed and do odd jobs rather than become a tenant himself. When I asked him to explain why he was reluctant to rent land for farming, he replied: ''I'm also a farm owner, and so I feel ashamed to work for another person. If I didn't own any land, then I could go and rent land from someone else. But to go and take in land from someone else while possessing your own-one hesitates a little, that's all." He then told me that none of the thakurs would think of being tenants because "all have fields so there's no reason to rent in anybody else's land." At the same time, he acknowledged that the practice of tenancy was common among even those jats who were substantial landowners ("Oh, yes, those people do rent land"). Obviously, owning land had different implications for tenancy in the case of thakurs than in the case of jats. These implications were so obvious to Sompal that it did not even strike him as a "Indigenous" Knowledges: Agronomy

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contradiction that the fact of landownership satisfactorily explained why thakurs did not rent in land and, simultaneously, failed to explain why jats did so. The ideological transparency of Sompat's beliefs lay in the hegemonic position historically enjoyed by the thakurs as "owners" of the village. To be a tenant in the old order of things was to be a client of the thakurs. The previous chapter has demonstrated that patrons no longer use tenancy as an important means to recruit clients. The jats who, in any case, were tenants in the old order incurred no symbolic losses in capitalizing on the new opportunities. But old associations persisted, so how could a thakur, lord of the village, become a tenant and "work for someone else"? Although no longer inconceivable, becoming a tenant could not have been an appealing prospect to someone like Sompal. The hegemony of the landed castes played a very important role in the justifications given for assessing "proper" or "appropriate" rates for goods and services. For example, wages were fixed at ten rupees per day66 for all agricultural tasks performed by men except for a brief period during the harvesting of the rabi crop.67 Although wholesale shifts in the wage rate could be masked by changes in labor contracts, one might still have expected a dispersion of wage rates reflecting the difficulty of the task and the quality of work. In fact, such marketclearing adjustments were noticeably absent. "Good relations," not the promise of higher wages, is what attracted a laborer to a particular employer, providing a sharp contrast to the individualistic and meritocratic ideology of what a "just wage" should "naturally" have been. However, a laborer who made a reputation for himself as a "good worker" could choose where he wanted to work but could not demand a higher wage. A number of farmers in the village claimed that the need to obtain fodder for their animals was an important reason for planting particular crops such as barley. I asked Suresh why he did not plant the most profitable crop and buy the fodder he needed from someone else. At first he said that fodder was not available in the village. When I pointed out that the lower-caste households who were in the buggy (buffalo cart) rental business had more work on their hands than they could handle transporting surplus fodder from the village to the market in town, he said that they would not sell him a small enough quantity of fodder. Finally, it emerged that the main reason for his reluctance to purchase fodder was that he did not think they sold it at the "proper" or "appropriate" rate. This sentiment was widely shared, as evidenced by the fact 222

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